Asif Suria

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The tremors from the failure of Lehman Brothers (LEH) are still being felt across the globe in what I feel might be the last act in the financial meltdown we have experienced this year. As I read the announcement of Lehman's decision to declare bankruptcy on Sunday night, I watched the Indian stock market crash with the BSE Sensex dropping more than 800 points to 13,150 before recovering to close at 13,531, a loss of 470 points or 3.35%. Much of Europe shared a similar fate with London's FTSE 100 dropping 3.92%.

In contrast the 250 to 300 point loss that the Dow posted through most of the trading session on Monday felt like a muted response until things fell apart in the last hour of trading and the Dow Jones Industrial Average closed the day with a loss of 504.48 or 4.42%.

Tuesday seems to be shaping up as another day of losses with the BSE Sensex dropping nearly 400 points in the first few minutes of trading before recovering some of those losses, the Japanese Nikkei index dropping 5% (the Japanese market was closed on Monday) and FTSE 100 falling 1.5%.

The obvious question on every active investor's mind is what now? While having lunch with a friend from Smith Barney yesterday, he mentioned how this bear market was different from the one we experienced after the dot com bubble burst where one could at least find some sectors or asset classes like bonds that continued to perform well. This market is directionless and almost every sector, country and asset class seems to be going down in unison.

After its recent pullback to $786.30 per troy ounce, Gold and some of the senior gold mining companies like Newmont Mining (NEM) and Barrick Gold (ABX) are beginning to look attractive. I am also tempted to start positions in some of the stocks that are on the top of my watch-list including Flextronics (FLEX), Oregon-based scrap metal company Schnitzer Steel (SCHN) and Indian mining company Sterlite Industries (SLT), which has been hit hard in recent weeks due to a corporate restructuring and a deflating commodities market.

It was just last week when I mentioned in the blog entry Taking Profits in Umpqua Holdings (UMPQ) that "we may be entering the last act of the downturn in financial stocks but I feel that we have not hit the bottom yet."

That sentiment remains unchanged and it may still be prudent to hold back and not attempt to catch falling knifes or pick market bottoms in this highly volatile market. With our short pick Ultrashort Russell 2000 (TWM) up almost 12% since we doubled our position in it at the start of September, I may close out the position and take some profits in the near future. If I decide to add or close positions in the SINLetter model portfolio, I will post the decision on the blog before making any changes.

Voluntary Disclosure: I hold a position in Ultrashort Russell 2000 (TWM) in my personal portfolio.

This article has 6 comments:

  •  
    Sep 16 09:55 AM
    two words: debt deflation.
    Reply | Link to Comment
  •  
    Sep 16 10:09 AM
    Yes its different. Basically the only word to describe it is greed. The american risk level is much hgher than it has ever been. This not only applies the the general public but also to the CEOs of most companies. Value investing use to be the norm now momentum trading is the norm. Pressure is on CEOs to grow, Growth, Growth, Growth and all expense. This means moving factories and jobs out of the country, taking on riskier projects, etc.

    Another problem is Americans themselves, they want to become rich overnight. We have become lazy and stagnant. We spend more than we save. Lets face it even the government feeds this. Their stimulus was for spending, not for paying off debt or saving.

    On top of our higher risk levels money supply has grown debasing the dollar to the lowest level its ever been. America has gotten away with this because most of the free world pegs there dollars to the US dollar. Once they lose faith in our dollar the real collapse will begin.
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  •  
    Sep 16 10:12 AM
    Another thing to keep in mind. The baby boomers are beginning to retire. Money will becoming out of stocks, bonds, etc. Especially now since their networth was but by 50 to 65%.

    The market may bounce after this recent tumble, but the long term trend is down.
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  •  
    Sep 16 10:45 AM
    Gold might hold some value if inflation was the issue, but the problem is that now, with oil prices dropping below $100/bbl, the key factor in recent price increases is gone. So gold is losing its luster as a hedge in this market, that's why Barrick took a 5% hit yesterday and has been falling steadily for the last month.

    Steel depends on manufacturing be business as usual, which it's not. Without demand, steel has been historically fickle. While their costs are down with the price of coal falling recently, if there's no demand, there's no profits.

    This is uncharted territory, my friends. I think the only thing to do right now is hold onto what you've got if you're already at a loss and assume you won't be right-side up for 3-4 years. This is no time to be bargain hunting and it's pointless to sell at a loss unless you made the mistake of buying into WaMu last week. If you are lucky, your portfolio contains at least a few dividend yielding stocks and that will at least give your portfolio some growth if you're set up to DRIP. Frankly, I think my money is safer in dividend yeilding stocks right now than in a bank.
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  •  
    Sep 17 09:32 AM
    The price of TWM now is somewhat below that a couple of months ago, with the situation was similar. Why so?
    Reply | Link to Comment
  •  
    @kkin: Looking at a three month chart comparing the Russell 2000 index with TWM, the Ultrashort ETF appears to be behaving as it should and you can see the inverse symmetry from the following chart,

    finance.yahoo.com/echa...=^RUT#chart2:symbol=^r...

    @rockymtnway: I do have a number of dividend paying stocks but the worry there is the potential higher taxation in case Obama wins. I agree that steel prices are likely to come down some more but SCHN is more than just steel prices and I continue to keep the company on my watch list.
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