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April 2005
June 2005
July 2005
August 2005
September 2005
October 2005
November 2005
December 2005
January 2006
February 2006
March 2006
May 2006
June 2006
July 2006
August 2006
8/28/2006 11:14:00 PM|||BWV|||Akamai (AKAM) is a true bubble survivor. I can't claim to understand it precisely, but their business model is apparently firing right now. The profile on yahoo finance is gibberish, read the wikipedia page here if interested. In a moment that may still haunt some portfolio manager, the stock traded for 56 cents at the October 2002 bottom. Well, somebody got their mojo back. I couldn't help but notice the huge volume gap up after their 2q earnings release. Moves that powerful follow tend to follow thru in many cases. We had established a position only days earlier when my good friend (and insanely young MSFT/SYMC alum), Tim Johnson, called to say he was taking a job with the company. Tim knows the tech business cold and has historically hitched his wagon to winners. Alliteration aside, for my purposes, that fact nicely complements the sweet chart setup. Long AKAM|||115682324800644208|||Banzai Akamai8/27/2006 11:35:00 PM|||BWV|||This idea has been tossed about recently in investment circles... though with far less fervor than the "next Microsoft" talk of yesteryear. I'm betting that it has some merit. As I undertstand, worldwide water usability statistics are really scary. Supposedly the pollution scene in China is horrendous. Potable water will (again, supposedly) get scarcer with global warming, drought, and other climate change.. and investment in H2O infrastructure will soar. This certainly has the makings of a good investment theme. After discovering that an ETF already existed for the water theme, I assumed it would be mostly utilities. Wrong! As this breakdown shows, utes are only a quarter of the exposure.. nearly half is in infrastructure and purification companies. The chart looks like it's formed a bottom, and we got long last week. We'll bid for more soon. As for the broader market.. Well you can read 10,000 opinions on 10,000 other trading blogs, but here goes: We had a very quiet week, drifting barely lower in meaningless late summer trade. The big cap indexes are leading now, with big growth small cap stocks generally not having recovered as well. Broadly speaking, this is far from a runaway bull market. This chart of the Russell 2000 (via the IWM, as usual for me) shows some "precarious promise." The down trend is still intact for now.. that's negative. But instead of completely breaking down on the 3rd visit under $67, it has formed what could turn out to be a first higher low in any renewed up trend. Low volatility eventually begets high volatility. For now: we're all wound up, with somewhere to go. Long PHO|||115673841781755266|||Water the "next Oil" ?8/11/2006 02:28:00 PM|||BWV|||No we're not betting the farm on any single stock.. Looking through our holdings, I've now unintentionally established positions in 3 positions that only Darth Vader (or this freak) could love: Imperial Industries (IPII) Imperial Oil (IMO) Imperial Sugar (IPSU) Quite random... Long imperialism ? |||115532149168384048|||Tripling Down8/11/2006 01:31:00 PM|||BWV|||The market appears to be in real trouble now. There isn't a bid under much of anything. Even the oil service index OIH is getting smacked and looks toppish. I seem to be hearing much chatter dismissing this action as "typical summer selling." Seasonality probably is playing a role, but that doesn't make the outlook any prettier. Down is down no matter what month we're living in. If you look back, the index charts bottommed out around the same areas in June & July.. so if those levels are revisited, it will be the 3rd time there.. which I've learned is often the "charm" for a level to be decisively broken. Not always, but pretty decent odds.. I'm guessing here, but 65% seems reasonable. My personal lines in the sand for defining the begginning of a Bear market are: Russell (IWM): $66.30 S&P (SPY): $122.25 DJIA: 10,700 Nasdaq: already in a Bear However I'm by no means the only guy thinking this way.. last I checked, one of my mentors, Trader Oz, is actually looking for this test to hold -- because so many like are are thinking this way -- and for a furious rally to ensue. We shall see how all this "fading the fader's fade" business works itself out. Looking at individual names... I've loosely followed this Cheniere Energy stock for a while now.. a very speculative liquid natural gas related stock.. that trades at a mere 660 times revenues! Click here to look at its "key stats" on Yahoo Finance.. While there be sure to click on the analyst estimates to see just how much revenue growth they're expecting (i'm being facetious). "Earnings" were released at 6:13pm last Friday (Herb Greenberg taught me to be skeptical of any company that releases important news late on Fridays or over weekends).. Judging by the action this week, the numbers impressed few. If this thing looks to close under $32 today I'll likely double up, making LNG the largest short position in my firm's short history. Amazon is probing this $26 area for the 3rd time now.. This short looks like it could last till the start of Christmas shopping season.. when some bottom fishers will probably emerge. We still made a few new buys so far todays. Listed below.. Long IMO, IPSU, NGPS, PWR Short AMZN, LNG |||115532026445770999|||Slippery Slopes8/09/2006 10:09:00 AM|||BWV|||I have always believed that the earliest, most reliable evidence of a material slowdown in the consumer economy would come not from any government stats or guru prognostications. Because it represents the collective bets of investment managers with access to great information, the stock price action of Capital One (COF) will be my tell. This breakdown is still early, but if it gets some traction in the next week or so would suggesst an economic recession and a brutal stretch for the markets. We have a short in COF from yesterday afternoon. We are also short Corus Bank, a lender to condo developers in South Florida. 'Nuff said. Short COF, CORS|||115513354702506516|||Money Where Mouth Is8/08/2006 11:51:00 PM|||BWV|||Hey, it beats the tar out of unconscious incompetence. In addition to a great charting and scanning service, my TeleChart subscription delivers a daily article/opinion/manifesto that gets selected for publishing from a horde of TeleChart clients' submissions. Many clients consider it an honor to be published, and the company even sends each "knighted" (published) client a bottle of Veuve Clicquot Ponsardin champagne. With as much other content as I devour, rarely do I make it beyond line 2 of this stuff. But today's post instantly hooked me.. and I decided to republish here. Hopefully the Worden brothers (TeleChart owners) appreciate the lip service more than they deplore the plagiarism. The smart guys may tell you they "know" where some market is going in a week, month, or year. But the really smart -- or maybe dumb? -- ones will at least have backup plans. Dear Don, I have to laugh every time I hear from somebody heralding that there is no Holy Grail for us speculators. Ho, ho. There most certainly is a Holy Grail and if your readers care to listen I'm here to tell them about it, unless they know already in which case they should read no further. But first, if need be, let's establish that man is not particularly rational. Lots of cultural anthropologists and Keynesian economists think so, but I doubt that many politicians do. Mark Twain surely didn't think so, either. Sure, we live in houses with electricity and plumbing and go to the supermarket for food while chimps poke sticks into termite mounds and live in outdoor splendor when they are not being worked on in laboratories, but if we humans were so rational would we grow fat, smoke, drink cheap whiskey on a work night, fall in love, make promises, loan money, buy more stuff than we can afford, do the road rage thing, live inside tall buildings, and so on? Anyone with a brain can look at his or her behavior and detect a smattering, or more, much more, of irrational behavior, so why do we go around all the time insisting on our being so much smarter than we really are? If we are so rational, how come we aren't all rich, having earned, saved, and invested wisely instead of being middling having earned and spent or lost our money on wine, women, and song? How come we still vote for Republicans and Democrats? We live in ignorance all day, every day. Ignorance is our common state, not rationality. Although rationality is something that may pop up now and then in our lives, it does not do so consistently and may fail us altogether at critical junctures. (As when we would rather hold a losing position to see what happens next than to close it and be done with it, thereby saving us anguish and the loss of resources, both monetary and psychic.) So what's the deal here? Should we embrace ignorance and not rationality? Humph. Why would we do that? Why? Ha. 'Tis the Holy Grail it is. If your reptilian brain can be convinced of its almighty ignorance, it may turn out to be the most rational thing it has ever acceded to. We live in ignorance. We can't know ever so many things, let alone what is going to happen to a stock's price in the next week. Ignorance is far different from stupidity. It's stupid to think you can know something that is not knowable, but it is far from stupid to recognize your own ignorance when faced with the unknowable. Indeed, knowing your own ignorance is intelligence. (I hasten now to add that I think Don is one of the most ignorant people around.) You as the "rational man" are in a losing position. Think of the energy wasted searching for justifications and reasons for doing this or that? But in contrast, you, as the ignorant man finding yourself in a losing position, do not bother yourself with constantly re-establishing the premise in your mind that you are so very smart and accomplished and good-looking. Instead, you can just act with sweet aplomb. To put it differently, if your energy is not corrupted and depleted by a continuous attempt "to be right, to be smart, to know more, and most deadly, to want to be better," then your energy for seeing reality becomes vastly increased. Facts are always in the past. There is no future fact. What is known is in the past. As speculators we are interested in the future and use the past as prologue; however, if we get caught up in thinking that we can know the future if only we are just "good enough" and can gather more facts, or the right ones, and can then take the risk out of everything we do, then we are lost because we are living a lie. On the other hand, if we labor in ignorance as a matter of course, we are not then invested in this lie at all, but only in what is going on. This is freedom. You are no longer tyrannized by a mind that is overwhelmingly concerned with appearing smart to itself. The mind will act rationally when it is does not burden itself with trying to be something it is not. We live with "I don't know." So if we don't know, what do we do? Mitigate risk is the rational thing to do. Ah, at times, when we are relaxed, we can be rational! Hooray for evolution! And so ignorance leads to brilliance, but had we started out wanting to be brilliant, all would have been lost and the Holy Grail would still be hidden from our sight. "Conduct your triumph as a funeral." Lao Tzu In gratitude, Sir Bigfoot |||115509720305716942|||Conscious Incompetence as a Goal ?8/07/2006 12:11:00 PM|||BWV|||Before discovering TradeLog software, I used to match trades manually using Excel. My Schedule D was an annual nightmare. As I toiled into the night during early April, I always wondered why virtually no brokerages provide actual tax lot accounting for their clients. They made the trade.. they have the necessary information.. and they have no excuse. Compare this shortcoming with another source of tax payments: - Your employer reports your wages to the IRS on a W-2. Employers are required to comply. Straightforward. Your tax return better match up, or you get an unwelcome phone call. - Brokerage firms only report "Total Sales Proceeds" on the 1099 that both you and the IRS receive -- not actual gains & losses. They leave those calculations to you, and predictably people tend to get it wrong either by honest mistake or by understating gains. Presumably prompted by deficits, Uncle Sam has woken up & realized he's beeen getting ripped off -- the "tax gap" is estimated in the hundreds of billions annually. Washington is finally mulling a change (Click here for the story). Voila.. one government proposal that actually makes sense!|||115496893497437734|||My Favorite Tax Reform8/07/2006 04:01:00 PM|||Blogger Randall|||Buckner,

I've asked the good old boys at Geronimo the exact same question, and (for the lack of better answer) they claim that we are not in the tax advisory business and then try to quote some securities act from ages ago. Probably bullshit...

Randall8/03/2006 07:59:00 AM|||BWV|||FWIW.. One trader whom I respect immensely, James "RevShark" DePorre, has started posting his nightly reviews of market action and index charts for free.. at least temporarily. Here's the link. There's also one other location where Rev's commentary can regularly be found.|||115460664487746029|||Evening Review