Todd H. : "Monday Morning Quarterback"

"Monday Morning Quarterback: Step Function! "
Todd Harrison
May 18, 2009 9:30 am
" The beginning of the end or the end of the beginning?
"All great masters are chiefly distinguished by the power of adding a second, a third, and perhaps a fourth step in a continuous line. Many a man had taken the first step. With every additional step you enhance immensely the value of your first."
--Ralph Waldo Emerson
We often opine that technical analysis is a better context than catalyst. With so many crosscurrents competing for our collective attention, the world is watching several levels with bated breath.
We offered on Friday that battles and wars were being waged, with the retest of S&P 875—the level from which the market broke out—an intuitive first step. On cue, the market probed that level and bounced, which one would expect on the first test.
Investors enter a fresh five-session set with one question in mind. Was last week’s 5% haircut on the S&P a pause that refreshes, as the bulls would like to believe, or the beginning of the end of the bear market bounce and the other side of the “W” formation?
My view—one I secretly hope is wrong—is that contrary to popular opinion, the socioeconomic landscape is getting worse, not better. While prices are the arbiter of variant financial views, the recent rally was synthetically manufactured; much like it was at the turn of the century.
The natural response is to point to the “gains” on the heels of that effort. I would reply that there is a massive distinction between a legitimate economic recovery and credit-fueled growth masked by a lower dollar and skewed by the spending habits of a slimming margin of society.
Throughout the prolonged period of conspicuous consumption, cumulative imbalances continued to build and the middle class steadily eroded until the debt bubble burst in 2007. It stands to reason that the aftermath of a grand experiment gone awry won’t be cured by yet another grand experiment.
As the government bought the cancer and sold the car crash, the simple yet sad truth is that the system still has cancer. That doesn’t mean it’s terminal, it simply means the inevitable medicine of time, price and debt destruction must eventually replace the multitude of drugs that have been injected in an attempt to mask the disease.
To be sure, the “easy” trade on the short side was a few years ago when the markets were dancing at all-time highs. Conversely, the bulls should have been licking their chops in early March when they were stopped out against Armageddon.
In my trading account, I’ve respected this dynamic through my stylistic approach. After trading from the short side for much of the last two years (with several notable exceptions), I flipped my lid and “bought dips to sell blips” in March, balanced that process in April and again began to trade from the short side two weeks ago.
It should be noted (as it was on the Buzz & Banter Friday afternoon) that I covered my recent short-side bets into S&P 875 as a function of discipline. I’ll be taking my first vacation of the year beginning Thursday afternoon and plan to “hit it to quit it” and enter the holiday stretch with a clean pad and clear head.
Where you stand is a function of where you sit. Just make sure that should the music suddenly stop, you’ve already eyed a comfy chair to rest your risk.
Random Thoughts:
The insider trading probe at the S.E.C. should do wonders to instill confidence through the lens of social mood and risk appetites.
Anecdotal stories abound that contrary to mainstay market proxies, the real world is getting worse.
The General Motors (GM) toe tag is seemingly inevitable. The real questions will center on counter-party risks and the treatment of bondholders following the Chrysler fiasco.
The stakes, as we know, are much bigger than any one company.
In early June, I’ll be releasing Memoirs of a Minyan, an honest introspection from someone who fell prey to the false idolatry of money. I originally wrote it as a book (and received an offer to publish it) but decided to release it as an e-Book, with one chapter a week for 18 weeks. I sincerely hope you enjoy it.
The globalization sword indeed swings both ways.
If you haven’t read Edmund Andrew’s My Personal Credit Crisis, I encourage you to do so. It’s an astounding story.
There's been swine flu chatter that this strain may have been man made (although the WHO was quick to take the other side).
My point on April 30th was simply that there was NO specter of such a scenario priced into financial assets.
If I've learned anything in life, it's that the probability spectrum is rarely 100% (or zero percent, as the case may be).
Was my coverage of short-side exposure into S&P 875 pre-mature evacuation? Could be, I've been know to jump the gun before. My ex once called me a bad lover. My response to her was, "how can you tell in thirty seconds?"
It just doesn’t get any better than The Princess Bride.
Bank America (BAC), which has been a tried and true tell of late, remains front and center on our radar.
On the one side, there is debt destruction and eventual globalization. On the other, isolationism, protectionism and geopolitical discord.
There hasn’t been much to cheer about in the Bronx this year but three consecutive walk-off Yankee winners was, in a word, special.
In the "oh by the way" department, the dollar was up a full percent Friday and retested the level from which it broke.
While we can conceivably see a weaker dollar and weaker asset classes, a strong dollar is a headwind we should most certainly respect.
Please allow an hour or so for the post-expiration hangover to abate today before taking the tape’s temperature.
Good luck Minyans and let’s be careful out there.
R.P."
(in www.minyanville.com)
Todd Harrison
May 18, 2009 9:30 am
" The beginning of the end or the end of the beginning?
"All great masters are chiefly distinguished by the power of adding a second, a third, and perhaps a fourth step in a continuous line. Many a man had taken the first step. With every additional step you enhance immensely the value of your first."
--Ralph Waldo Emerson
We often opine that technical analysis is a better context than catalyst. With so many crosscurrents competing for our collective attention, the world is watching several levels with bated breath.
We offered on Friday that battles and wars were being waged, with the retest of S&P 875—the level from which the market broke out—an intuitive first step. On cue, the market probed that level and bounced, which one would expect on the first test.
Investors enter a fresh five-session set with one question in mind. Was last week’s 5% haircut on the S&P a pause that refreshes, as the bulls would like to believe, or the beginning of the end of the bear market bounce and the other side of the “W” formation?
My view—one I secretly hope is wrong—is that contrary to popular opinion, the socioeconomic landscape is getting worse, not better. While prices are the arbiter of variant financial views, the recent rally was synthetically manufactured; much like it was at the turn of the century.
The natural response is to point to the “gains” on the heels of that effort. I would reply that there is a massive distinction between a legitimate economic recovery and credit-fueled growth masked by a lower dollar and skewed by the spending habits of a slimming margin of society.
Throughout the prolonged period of conspicuous consumption, cumulative imbalances continued to build and the middle class steadily eroded until the debt bubble burst in 2007. It stands to reason that the aftermath of a grand experiment gone awry won’t be cured by yet another grand experiment.
As the government bought the cancer and sold the car crash, the simple yet sad truth is that the system still has cancer. That doesn’t mean it’s terminal, it simply means the inevitable medicine of time, price and debt destruction must eventually replace the multitude of drugs that have been injected in an attempt to mask the disease.
To be sure, the “easy” trade on the short side was a few years ago when the markets were dancing at all-time highs. Conversely, the bulls should have been licking their chops in early March when they were stopped out against Armageddon.
In my trading account, I’ve respected this dynamic through my stylistic approach. After trading from the short side for much of the last two years (with several notable exceptions), I flipped my lid and “bought dips to sell blips” in March, balanced that process in April and again began to trade from the short side two weeks ago.
It should be noted (as it was on the Buzz & Banter Friday afternoon) that I covered my recent short-side bets into S&P 875 as a function of discipline. I’ll be taking my first vacation of the year beginning Thursday afternoon and plan to “hit it to quit it” and enter the holiday stretch with a clean pad and clear head.
Where you stand is a function of where you sit. Just make sure that should the music suddenly stop, you’ve already eyed a comfy chair to rest your risk.
Random Thoughts:
The insider trading probe at the S.E.C. should do wonders to instill confidence through the lens of social mood and risk appetites.
Anecdotal stories abound that contrary to mainstay market proxies, the real world is getting worse.
The General Motors (GM) toe tag is seemingly inevitable. The real questions will center on counter-party risks and the treatment of bondholders following the Chrysler fiasco.
The stakes, as we know, are much bigger than any one company.
In early June, I’ll be releasing Memoirs of a Minyan, an honest introspection from someone who fell prey to the false idolatry of money. I originally wrote it as a book (and received an offer to publish it) but decided to release it as an e-Book, with one chapter a week for 18 weeks. I sincerely hope you enjoy it.
The globalization sword indeed swings both ways.
If you haven’t read Edmund Andrew’s My Personal Credit Crisis, I encourage you to do so. It’s an astounding story.
There's been swine flu chatter that this strain may have been man made (although the WHO was quick to take the other side).
My point on April 30th was simply that there was NO specter of such a scenario priced into financial assets.
If I've learned anything in life, it's that the probability spectrum is rarely 100% (or zero percent, as the case may be).
Was my coverage of short-side exposure into S&P 875 pre-mature evacuation? Could be, I've been know to jump the gun before. My ex once called me a bad lover. My response to her was, "how can you tell in thirty seconds?"
It just doesn’t get any better than The Princess Bride.
Bank America (BAC), which has been a tried and true tell of late, remains front and center on our radar.
On the one side, there is debt destruction and eventual globalization. On the other, isolationism, protectionism and geopolitical discord.
There hasn’t been much to cheer about in the Bronx this year but three consecutive walk-off Yankee winners was, in a word, special.
In the "oh by the way" department, the dollar was up a full percent Friday and retested the level from which it broke.
While we can conceivably see a weaker dollar and weaker asset classes, a strong dollar is a headwind we should most certainly respect.
Please allow an hour or so for the post-expiration hangover to abate today before taking the tape’s temperature.
Good luck Minyans and let’s be careful out there.
R.P."
(in www.minyanville.com)