"The social system of private property and limited government is the only system that tends to debarbarize all those who have the innate capacity to acquire personal culture." ~Ludwig von Mises
May 26, 2010
Tim Geithner on sustaining the unsustainable
~ Timothy Geithner, US Secretary of the Treasury, remarks at the U.S.-China Strategic and Economic Dialogue, Beijing, China, May 25th, 2010
May 21, 2010
Jim Grant on the Too Big to Fail banking doctrine (1990)
May 20, 2010
Philip Fisher on faulty investment community appraisals of market conditions
~ Philip Fisher, stock legend, "Still More About the Fourth Dimension", Common Stocks and Uncommon Profits, 1958
Larry Kudlow on the fallout from Europe's troubles
We need to take the next step: just guarantee all the bank debt!
~ Larry Kudlow, as appeared on CNBC at 11:10 am EST, May 20, 2010
May 16, 2010
Time magazine on financial regulation
~ Time, "The New Sherrifs of Wall Street," May 13, 2010, by Michael Scherer
A typical individual investor: "I'm not jumping into this market" (1982)
~ David Logan, 60, retired real estate developer in Chicago, "Wall Street's Super Streak," Time, September 6, 1982
May 15, 2010
Jean-Claude Trichet on buying sovereign debt in the eurozone
~Jean-Claude Trichet, president, European Central Bank, "A 'Quantum Leap' in Governance of the Euro Zone Is Needed", Der Spiegel, May 15th, 2010
Nancy Pelosi on the entrepreneurial spirit of the healthcare reform bill of 2010
~Nancy Pelosi, Speaker of the House, 110th US Congress, remarks from a speech given to the Asian American and Pacific Islanders Summit, May 14th, 2010
Alan Skrainka on the European bailout of May 2010
~Alan Skrainka, Chief Market Strategist, Edward Jones, "They Said What? European Bailout", Barron's magazine, May 15th, 2010
Kevin Duffy on the European bailout of May 2010
~Kevin Duffy, principal, Bearing Asset Management, "They Said What? European Bailout", Barron's magazine, May 15th, 2010
Jim Cramer on investing in the "New World" (2000)
You have to throw out all of the matrices and formulas and texts that existed before the Web. You have to throw them away because they can't make money for you anymore, and that is all that matters. We don't use price-to-earnings multiples anymore at Cramer Berkowitz. If we talk about price-to-book, we have already gone astray
So, if you can't own the retailers, and you can't own transports, and you can't own banks and brokers and financials and you can't own commodity makers and you can't own the newspapers, and you can't own the machinery stocks, what can you own? A-ha, that just leaves us with tech. That's why we keep coming back to it. That's why, despite the 80% increase in the Nasdaq last year, we are looking at another record year now.
~Jim Cramer, former hedge fund manager and host of CNBC's Mad Money, "The Winners of the New World", speech delivered February 29, 2000.
(Note: some analysis of this speech and the later results of Cramer's picks available at Credit Bubble Stocks.)
Stifel Nicolaus analyst on financial regulation
~ Chris Brendler, Stifel Nicolaus analyst, May 7 note to clients, quoted in BusinessWeek, "'Flash Crash' Poses Further Uncertainty for Stocks," May 10, 2010, by Ben Steverman
May 14, 2010
Philip Fisher on the inevitable bullishness of war for stocks
~Philip Fisher, stock legend, "Five More Don'ts for Investors", Common Stocks and Uncommon Profits, 1958
Philip Fisher on portfolio size
~ Philip Fisher, stock legend, "Five More Don'ts for Investors", Common Stocks and Uncommon Profits, 1958
Jimmy Cayne on the collapse of Bear Stearns due to market forces
~Jimmy Cayne, former chairman and CEO, Bear Stearns, opening remarks in testimony given to the Financial Crisis Iniquiry Commission, May 5th, 2010
Alan Schwartz on speculation and rumor as the cause of the fall of Bear Stearns
~Alan Schwartz, former CEO, Bear Stearns, opening remarks of testimony given to the Financial Crisis Iniquiry Commission, May 5th, 2010
Jim Cramer flip-flops on his Dow 9,000 price target, embraces change
See, remember what I said, I said, we could go back there if Trichet, the head of the European Central Bank, continued to do nothing to solve the euro's problems and the disaster that is Greece. But that's not what happened. I said I was negative because Trichet had left the building, remember I had said he had left the building-- he came back in Friday night! Dragged by other countries' ministers, particularly France and Germany.
He and his fellow European finance ministers did something, and not just anything. They did amazing things this weekend along with the EU and in coordination with our Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke and Treasury Secretary Geithner, they understand these problems we're facing better than any other people in the world. And you know Ben Bernanke is the best central banker in the world, I said that on Friday.
Now, when that European contagion risk is taken off the table, what am I supposed to do, just stay negative? I can't! When a plan that basically delivers all the things I was calling for and crying for on Thursday and Friday comes along, I can't fight it and say, "Uh uh, nope, it's not what I want, gotta stay negative, uh uh!" I can't. The plan was exactly what I wanted.
In the words of the late, great economist and investor, maybe the best of both, John Maynard Keynes, who would have absolutely approved of Europe's solution, and I quote, "When the facts change, I change my mind. What do you do, sir?"
~Jim Cramer, "Embracing Change", Mad Money, May 10th, 2010
Jim Cramer on being confused by the short-sellers and those who hire them
The nattering naybobs of negativity and the chicken littles just would not stop all day. In short, probably because they are short, people who can find fault with anything and everything. I have one question for these people: how the heck do these people make money? Or how about a second question: who pays for that advice?
~Jim Cramer, "Embracing Change", Mad Money, May 10th, 2010
Jim Cramer on leadership potential in growth stocks following the "flash crash"
They've trumped Spain, they've trumped Portugal, even Greece! And remember, we're already less worried about those ne'er-do-well countries because the market is still soaring in recognition that the International Monetary Fund, which doubles as the Impossible Missions Force, is getting the job done. And I gotta tell you, from the strong rally in the bonds of the ne'er-do-well countries, I gotta tell ya-- we're not done. By the way, we don't mind sayin' it-- we told ya so!
The bottom line: with fast-growing stocks like Apple, Salesforce.com, Intuitive Surgical, Chipotle and Deckers, the true Marine generals of the market are taking the lead and the whole growth cohort should soon follow. We've got great leadership and that's a powerful reason to believe in this rally. Semper fi stocks, for a surging market!
~Jim Cramer, "Leaders of the Pack", Mad Money, May 12th, 2010
Jim Cramer on the "flash crash" flushing out the marginal stock holders
Now we've got a situation where the only people left are the solid, long-term holders. So, we don't have to worry about or fight our fellow shareholders who are desperately trying to get out the door-- they've already left the building.
I want to thank the "Roubs" for this, so-called because of their leader, Nouriel "Roub"-ini, the professor who seems to have tenure on television. All these Johnny-One-Notes would make you very poor if you actually took their advice.
~Jim Cramer, "Curb Your Enthusiasm?", Mad Money, May 13th, 2010
Jim Cramer on skepticism and pessimism as engines of wealth
But right now, I see skeptimism [sic] and pessimism, and judging by the 500-point rally since the bogus sell-off a week ago, plus today's ugliness, pessimism and skepticism are going to be engines of wealth not purveyors of poverty.
~Jim Cramer, "Curb Your Enthusiasm?", Mad Money, May 13th, 2010
Jim Cramer on the success of the IMF-sponsored eurozone bailout
~Jim Cramer, "Curb Your Enthusiasm?", Mad Money, May 13th, 2010
Jim Cramer on deflationary oil prices
~Jim Cramer, "Curb Your Enthusiasm?", Mad Money, May 13th, 2010
May 13, 2010
Bill Ackman on ratings agencies as underwriters of the financial crisis
One of the problems is, when you have an institution who is allowed to write opinions that have enormous market impact, but they have no economic – they have an exemption for free speech, it can create some problems. Rating agencies, in my view, during the credit crisis acted effectively as underwriters. Deals could not get done without their imprimatur.
~Bill Ackman, CEO, Pershing Square Capital, Bloomberg News, May 13th, 2010
Anthony Scaramucci on the barbarous relic
Gold is the twisted mistress of investment. It hurts everybody: it hurts the gold bugs; it hurts the gold bears; it brings everybody down over a long period of time. Be very careful on gold.
~ Anthony Scaramucci, founder and managing partner, SkyBridge Capital, CNBC Fast Money, May 11th, 2010
Dennis Gartman on the time horizons of hedge fund managers
~Dennis Gartman, "The Commodities King", author of the Gartman Letter, CNBC Fast Money, May 11th, 2010
May 12, 2010
Karen Finerman, Fast Money trader, on the ineffective TARP bailout
~Karen Finerman, "The Chairwoman", CNBC Fast Money, May 10th, 2010
May 11, 2010
Ludwig von Mises on the compatibility of logic and life
~ Ludwig von Mises, "The Role of Ideas," Human Action, pg. 185
May 10, 2010
MoStan Asia's Stephen Roach on the increasing frequency of financial crises
~Stephen Roach, chairman, Morgan Stanley Asia, Bloomberg Radio interview, May 10th, 2010
May 8, 2010
Fred Hickey: "I don't regard the selloff as a great short selling opportunity"
Today, there's not even a hint of Federal Reserve rate hikes nor of significant liquidity draining. [...]
This kind of support from the Fed makes it unlikely that the current correction will turn into any kind of sustained bear market for stocks. The Fed would likely reinstate its QE [Quantitative Easing] program if stocks declined too sharply. Bernanke told Congress last month that there was nothing that says the Fed couldn't buy more mortgage-backed securities if conditions warranted. Therefore, even though I'm expecting this downturn to continue for a while, I don't regard the selloff as a great short selling opportunity, unlike what I had foreseen in the late 1990s-2000 and again in 2007 when interest rates were hiked.
~ Fred Hickey, The High-Tech Strategist, May 5, 2010
BofA's David Bianco on market timing during the global equity crisis of 2010
~David Bianco, Head of US Equity Strategy, BofA Merrill Lynch Global Research, "Market Update: Is Volatility Back?", May 7, 2010
Michael Hartnett on buying the global equity dip
~Michael Hartnett, Chief Global Equity Strategist, BofA Merrill Lynch Global Research, "Market Update: Is Volatility Back?", May 7, 2010
Nicholas Sarkozy is serious about defending the euro
~Nicholas Sarkozy, president of France, Bloomberg, "EU to Set Up Fund to Prevent Spread of Greek Crisis", May 8, 2010
May 7, 2010
Bove on European debt crisis
"US banks exposed to Europe debt woes", CNBC.com, May 7, 2010
BofA's David Bianco on the hope of mercantilism in Europe
Now, if the contagion spreads, that could not be the case but a weaker Euro should actually stimulate those parts of the European economy. So, I can certainly see why certain Europeans are taking the attitude of, "This is not our problem." But that's dangerous.
~David Bianco, Head of US Equity Strategy, BofA Merrill Lynch Global Research, "Market Update: Is Volatility Back?", May 7, 2010
Michael Hartnett on the need for quantitative easing in response to the PIIGS crisis
So, damage has been done, without a doubt and you are likely to see GDP estimates in Europe fall, but they won't fall too far so long as the ECB steps in.
There's an old adage, "Markets stop panicking when policymakers start panicking." That's what you should keep in the back of your mind the next couple of weeks. Once you see the panic, it'll be over.
~Michael Hartnett, Chief Global Equity Strategist, BofA Merrill Lynch Global Research, "Market Update: Is Volatility Back?", May 7, 2010
BofA's David Bianco on why investors shouldn't panic over Greece
It's the earnings that are supportive of the market at these levels and it's earnings as volatility comes down and confidence gets better, that should take the market to our price target of 1300 for this year, and 1350 over twelve months.
Particularly for long-term investors, I wouldn't panic, I wouldn't dump stocks. I'd nibble at the larger cap companies in the S&P that I think are going to do well.
~David Bianco, Head of US Equity Strategy, BofA Merrill Lynch Global Research, "Market Update: Is Volatility Back?", May 7, 2010
Michael Hartnett on the outlook for the global economy after the panic
~Michael Hartnett, Chief Global Equity Strategist, BofA Merrill Lynch Global Research, "Market Update: Is Volatility Back?", May 7, 2010
Michael Hartnett on living in a stock-picker's paradise
~Michael Hartnett, Chief Global Equity Strategist, BofA Merrill Lynch Global Research, "Market Update: Is Volatility Back?", May 7, 2010
May 6, 2010
Sheldon Richman on Michael Moore distorting the history of top income tax rate cuts
[Michael] Moore even complains that the top income-tax rate was lowered from 90 percent some years ago. Conveniently, he gets the history wrong. He says Republican Ronald Reagan cut the 90 percent rate, but it really was Democrat Lyndon Johnson who did it, following through on John Kennedy’s proposal. (Reagan presided over a cut from 70 to 50 and then to 28 percent.) At any rate, Moore is perfectly comfortable with government’s taking 90 percent of wealthy people’s earnings and seems indifferent to whether the money is made through honest trade or political privilege.
~ Sheldon Richman, "The Phony Radicalism of Michael Moore,"Freedom Daily, April 27, 2010
Philip Fisher on selling stocks
Philip Fisher, stock legend, "When to Sell", Common Stocks and Uncommon Profits, 1958
May 5, 2010
Bill Gross on the incompetence of the ratings agencies
Now let’s go the other way. GMAC, that only too recently near-bankrupt finance company, carries recently upgraded B ratings from the rating services. Profiles in courage for all three, I say! I mean the U.S. government has injected $20 billion of capital and owns 65% of the company. It’s the auto industry’s equivalent of FNMA and FHLMC, except those are AAA and GMAC is B with a “positive outlook!” For that, you can buy a GMAC two-year bond at 6½% (8% with what are called “smart notes” that Investment Outlook readers can buy through their broker), while you receive only 1.2% at Fannie and Freddie. Vive la différence!
~Bill Gross, founder, PIMCO, "Investment Outlook", May 2010
Paul McCulley on the ratings agencies
~Paul McCulley, PIMCO, as quoted by Bill Gross, date unknown
Bill Gross on the ratings agencies
~Bill Gross, founder, PIMCO, "Investment Outlook", May 2010
Jim Rickards on similarities between Greece and the US, gold as an alternative currency
One big difference is that we can print our own money. But where does that get you? That's really the problem world-wide.
In every asset class, investors no longer think about the fundamentals, they think about government policy. In China, the question is, can the government prop up the housing market? In Europe, can the government prop up Greece? In the United States, can the government prop up the banks? We don't think about the fundamentals or balance sheets anymore.
[The US dollar and Treasuries] are the only place to go, but there are limits to that. The G-20 and the leaders may try to go to the IMF and SDRs to take the dollar off the hook, the market may go to gold on their own. So, it's kind of a race between SDRs and gold.
~Jim Rickards, senior managing director of market intelligence, Omnis Inc., CNBC Squawk Box, May 5th, 2010
Jimmy Cayne on the fantasy belief of politicians that legislation can alter reality without cost
~Jimmy Cayne, former CEO, Bear Stearns, Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission testimony, May 5th, 2010
Myron Scholes on the importance of risk modeling
~Myron Scholes, 1997 Nobel prize in economics winner, "Crash Course", NYT Magazine online preview, May 5th, 2010
May 4, 2010
Franklin Raines on the erosion of credit standards
~Franklin Raines, former chairman and CEO, Fannie Mae, CNBC, May 4th, 2010
Franklin Raines on risk management at Fannie Mae
~Franklin Raines, former chairman and CEO, Fannie Mae, CNBC, May 4th, 2010
(Of course, this directly contradicts the point he made moments earlier in the interview, in which he argued that Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and the FHA need to be available to support the mortgage market when traditional lenders become risk-averse and flee from these very types of mortgages he now says shouldn't have been made.)
Franklin Raines on how to prevent financial crises amongst large institutions
~Franklin Raines, former chairman and CEO, Fannie Mae, CNBC, May 4th, 2010
Franklin Raines on the importance of federal mortgage subsidies
~Franklin Raines, former chairman and CEO, Fannie Mae, CNBC, May 4th, 2010
May 3, 2010
Warren Buffett on the US government's stimulus efforts circa 2008
What became clear in the fall of 2008 is that the chairman of the Fed and the secretary of the Treasury and Sheila Bair at the FDIC were willing to do extraordinary things to essentially prevent a panic. They were the only ones that could've done it and I cheer them mightily for that.
~Warren Buffett, Goldman Sachs investor, "The Buffett Express", CNBC's Squawk Box, May 3, 2010
Warren Buffet on large government deficits
Who wants to lend money to someone who has a long-term policy of running deficits at 10%? It's unsustainable over time.
~Warren Buffett, Goldman Sachs investor, "The Buffett Express", CNBC's Squawk Box, May 3rd, 2010
Warren Buffett on jobs
~Warren Buffett, Goldman Sachs investor, "The Buffett Express", CNBC's Squawk Box, May 3rd, 2010
Warren Buffett on the historical resilience of the US economy
~Warren Buffett, Goldman Sachs investor, "The Buffett Express", CNBC's Squawk Box, May 3rd, 2010
Warren Buffett on the integrity of Goldman Sachs' leadership
~Warren Buffett, Goldman Sachs investor, "The Buffett Express", CNBC's Squawk Box, May 3rd, 2010
May 2, 2010
Thomas Piketty on insane Greek sovereign debt interest rates
~Thomas Piketty, professor and founder, Paris School of Economics, as quoted in "Deflation Could Stall Efforts to Revive Greece in Debt Crisis", NYT.com, May 2nd, 2010
French economics professor on virtue damning debt-burdened Greece
~Jean-Paul Fitoussi, professor of economics, Institut d’Études Politiques, Paris, France as quoted in "Deflation Could Stall Efforts To Revive Greece in Debt Crisis", NYT.com, May 2nd, 2010
Ken Fisher on gold (timing)
My point is I am neither pro-gold or con-gold, when I am asked, "What do you think about gold?" I ask, "Well, what do you think about your ability to time?"
~Ken Fisher, Intelligent Investing with Steve Forbes, April 23rd, 2010
May 1, 2010
Ken Fisher on investor psychology
The fact of the matter is most people think my optimism is pretty Pollyanna-ish. I think most people are caught up in this period I call the "Pessimism of Disbelief."
~Ken Fisher, Intelligent Investing with Steve Forbes, April 23rd, 2010
Ken Fisher on American un-exceptionalism
~Ken Fisher, Intelligent Investing with Steve Forbes, April 23rd, 2010
Ken Fisher on the global recovery led by emerging markets
~Ken Fisher, Intelligent Investing with Steve Forbes, April 23rd, 2010
(For comparison, consider this recent snippet by Kevin Duffy from the Azimuth blog: "According to the latest Investors Intelligence poll of investment newsletters, for the week ended August 20, 51.6% were bullish and 19.8% were bearish. This reading of +31.8% net bulls registered the highest level of optimism since December 21, 2007. At the time the S&P 500 stood at 1484, on the precipice of a 65% plunge in 15 months.")