Monthly Archives: March 2016

How To Avoid The Problem Of Short-Termism

If I had to pinpoint the biggest problem for most asset allocators I would probably say short-termism. Short-termism is the tendency to judge financial markets in periods that are so short that it results in higher fees, higher taxes and lower average performance. We’ve become accustomed to judging the financial markets in quarterly or annual periods…

Economists Increasingly Worried About People Having Too Much Cash

Economists are worried. That’s their second favorite pastime. Their favorite pastime? Making bad economic predictions. The big worry right now in Japan is that cash is piling up in record amounts. No one wants to spend it: Not corporations, not individuals. Given the massive amount of Japanese government debt, highest in the developed world, economists…

Bear Market Rally?

The rally in the stock market has extended to new recovery highs in March and some are now calling this a bear market rally. I look at some of the top technical and fundamental reasons the market is behaving the way it is. Charts include: large cap stocks, technology stocks, high yield bonds, tips, U.S….

US Oil Ends Week Down 5%

Oil prices were down slightly on Thursday, posting their first weekly loss in over a month, under pressure from record high U.S. stockpiles, a strong dollar and weakening equity markets. Despite the stumble, oil prices remain about 50 percent higher from multi-year lows hit in January from glut worries. The declining U.S. oil output and…

Fiscal And Monetary Madness

Global Currencies Madness: When central banks and politicians “manage” global currencies, we can expect: Exponentially increasing debt and currency devaluations Massive inflations and deflationary crashes. Transfer of wealth from the many to the few. Derivatives exceeding $1,000 Trillion and eventually a crash. A mathematically inevitable financial collapse. Monetary and fiscal madness. Booms and busts. Much…