Home › Forums › Financial Markets/Economics › Savvy Broker Needed
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August 31, 2006 at 4:36 PM #7396August 31, 2006 at 5:06 PM #34131vcguy_10Participant
Obviously, Yamamoto-san makes his money selling $360/yr subscriptions. If he had a system for making money in the stock market, he wouldn’t waste his time selling “advice”.
Shorting has a high risk/high return profile. Too risky for me. Our friend Soros made a billion dollars shorting the sterling pound and Italian lira in 1992, but people who are no less smart than him lost their shirts (and more) trying to do the same thing before or after him. You can clean up if you’re lucky, but if not, there’s no limit to your losses.
Beware of charlatans and market “timers” who may heed your call and come knocking your door. Sensible people know that the higher the return, the higher the risk.
August 31, 2006 at 5:43 PM #34132powaysellerParticipantvrudny, your comments are surprising, esp. if you’ve been reading my posts. I am not a trader, but consider myself a knowledgeable long-term investor. You are new to the forums?
I’ve predicted the market would tank since last January at least, but was always afraid of shorting, bec. of the high risk. I’ve been writing on this forum that people should sell their stocks early 2006. At that time, I was afraid of shorting, because I had read how risky it is. You can read my previous posts from last winter to get all the details.
My prediction of the market tanking has not yet occured, but all the signs for it are getting stronger.
I see opportunities in many companies which have not yet been beaten down, like WaMu, furniture makers, retailers, computer manufacturers esp. since the bulls are expecting the computer sector to keep going up but in a recession they are going down too, as companies pull back on capital spending. So it is definitely not too late.
Did you short anything?
August 31, 2006 at 5:57 PM #34134JESParticipantIs it the case that even though the pros have already shorted stocks, there is still opportunity because very few are predicting the kind of crash and recession that powayseller and others are? The pros are not shorting in anticipation of a major crash and recession are they? That’s where your money is to be made if you are right and time it well.
August 31, 2006 at 6:03 PM #34135WileyParticipantCouple thoughts,
A. I have yet to meet a broker that wasn’t just a salesperson disguised as a market seer. I’m sure they are out there but if they are that smart they are probably managing a fund (ok a bear fund).
B. I really hate this perpetual hype that shorting is so dangerous because stocks can go to infinity. If you get caught the wrong way you just cover and get out.
C. Nothing ever goes straight one way or the other and the decline in housing stocks does seem to be getting long in the tooth. Ultimately I agree they are going down more.
August 31, 2006 at 7:47 PM #34137Steve BeeboParticipantI’m no expert in shorting stocks, or even in the stock market. I have a brother who has an Edward Jones office, and he has handled mutual funds for me for 15+ years that have done great – I won’t pull any money out of stock mutual funds. But shorting homebuilder stocks doesn’t sound like a good idea right now – maybe it would have been a great idea 6-12 months ago. I think the market has most likely already factored in the problems they will have in the next couple of years.
August 31, 2006 at 9:04 PM #34142powaysellerParticipantJES, I agree with you, but as you can see, even the progressive contrarians on piggington are siding with the bulls. For this reason, there is plenty of opportunity to make money, bec. we contrarians are in the minority. I made a recession call in 2/06, and the most contrarian economist, Dr. Roubini, didn’t make it until 6 months later!
August 31, 2006 at 11:11 PM #34158privatebankerParticipantWhy short stocks when you can buy put options? Shorting has no limit to risk. Put options can only expire worthless worst case scenario.
August 31, 2006 at 11:44 PM #34161DanielParticipantPowayseller,
A friendly advice: be careful what you wish for. You have very strong beliefs, and it seems to me that you’re looking for validation, not advice. You want a broker to guide your hand, but you also want a broker to give you exactly the advice you want to hear (economy is going into the tank, and go short). If the broker/advisor tells you to go long or stay in cash, you’re not happy.
To make a somewhat cynical analogy, you’re like the patient convinced that she has a certain disease, and shopping for doctors in the hope that one will diagnose it “correctly”.
Powayseller, you either trust yourself to be right, and in that case you don’t need an advisor, just open an account at Schwab, or Ameritrade, or whatever, and trade according to your beliefs. Or you trust an advisor, and give that person your money to invest as he/she thinks it’s best. You really can’t have it both ways.
August 31, 2006 at 11:48 PM #34162bubble_contagionParticipantLast year when TOL was close to $60 many people on Ben’s blog shorted the stock. Even the brothers Toll were cashing out. Today TOL is at $26. It may be a little too late to short the builders but about the right time to short the lenders.
September 1, 2006 at 5:08 AM #34166powaysellerParticipantDaniel, I’m specifically looking for someone who has already studied the financial statements, since that is a very long process, that I don’t want to spend the time on right now.
I don’t look for validation at all, I’m quite contrarian. My requirement is that the trader/broker must have the same view of the economy as I; no sense asking for assistance from someone who’s more comfortable with the status quo of dollar cost averaging, and therefore will have NO clue what I’m talking about.
Daniel, asked for the name of someone with these qualifications, not an evaluation of my personality, which you can post in “off topic” if you are so inclined. Let’s stay on topic, please.
September 1, 2006 at 8:56 AM #34188michaelParticipantPowaySeller – I work for one of the wirehouses. Our structured product desk in New York is constantly creating new products. Last year they came out with an 18 month “Bear Note” that shorted the HGX (Home Builder Index). There is currently a note that is long Asian currencies – short US dollar. I share your views on housing. I also am a firm believer in Modern Portfolio Theory. I recommend you call a couple of wirehouses and ask about their structured products. I have worked with the structured product desk to create custom investments for clients with at least $1mm to invest in structured products.
September 1, 2006 at 9:04 AM #34193daveljParticipantIf I wanted short exposure, I’d invest in the Prudent Bear Fund. It will do very well if the market tanks – and conversely will do quite horribly if the market goes up. Unless you’re prepared to spend at least 10 hours a day at it, I wouldn’t bother shorting individual stocks. Too much can go wrong. I am a firm non-believer in MPT and CAPM.
September 1, 2006 at 9:17 AM #34195powaysellerParticipantdavelj, the last time I read the definitions of MPT and CAPM, I decided I don’t believe in it either. What are your reasons? Did you invest in the Prudent Bear funds? What do you think about shorting WaMu? The gains on shorting an undiscovered loser like WaMu could be huge. But yes, a lot can go wrong; they could quietly move their losses to a different section of their books, and by the time the market realizes their losses are due to foreclosures, my shorts will be priced out. The gov’t could bail them out, etc.
September 1, 2006 at 9:21 AM #34197PDParticipantI think homebuilder stocks are going to go down a lot more.
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