Tuesday, May 31, 2011

The Advisor Weblog

The Advisor Weblog


Starting the day

Posted: 31 May 2011 03:28 AM PDT

Hi everyone and welcome! Against my expectations and despite quite disappointing figures early Europe, the Euro is showing an impressive strength against its rivals, steady around 1.4400 against dollar and above 117.00 area against yen. Strong recovery in stocks since early Asian opening, and commodities, may be reason of this run, yet also the fact that Germany capitulated to demand further tightening and restructuration, along with geting ready to provide more loans. No matter what politicians say, but what they do. Germany can't afford Greece or any other troubled economy leaving the euro zone, as that will recude Euro value and credibility, to zero.

 

Still I really wasn't expecting EUR/USD reach 1.4400, and on contrary was expecting GBP to extend gains which didn't happened.

If EUR/USD manages to hold around this area, may extend gains towards 1.4440 before jumping towards 1.4500. Supports today, come at 1.4365, 1.4320 and 1.4270 area.

 

Pound still has chances of extending gains, yet now we need to overcome 1.6540 daily high to reach 1.6610 level. Supports for the pair are locatd at 1.6480 and 1.6445.

 

Here is the link for today's calendar:

 

http://www.fxstreet.com/fundamental/economic-calendar/

 

Have a great trading day!


'Inside Job' Tries to Define the Narrative



The award winning documentary Inside Job presents the 2008 financial crisis as basically a bunch of unethical, greedy bankers. There's an interview with a Madame who states 40% of her high-end clients are Wall Streeters, pictures of the Hampton homes highlighting how rich some people are, and a rockin' soundtrack. I'm sure there's an artist's reconstruction of banker baby-eating rituals that didn't make the cut. Comments on YouTube start at angry and get more emotional.



I did like the interviews with economists, such as when they interviewed Fred Mishkin, and he wrote a white paper just before the crisis giving the Icelandic financial system his expert Seal of Approval, titled "Financial Stability in Iceland," which after the crisis was listed on his CV as "Financial Instability in Iceland," something he called a 'typo' (see here). It's bad, and Mishkin should be ashamed for the rewrite, but such lame consulting projects by big names are omnipresent and orthogonal to the mortgage problem.



There's the focus on CDO's, which presumably were responsible for the mess. No mention, zero, of the Community Reinvestment Act, Fannie Mae, underwriting innovation driven by increased homeownership goals for minorities, the Boston Fed bank study and eventual $38MM payout to its sponsor Bill Styron, or Alicia Munnell's exceptional career based on a deeply flawed bit of hack advocacy masquerading as dry econometrics. One would never learn that government, journalists, community activists, and academics were fully behind the mortgage boom because it served their ends too, and they too ignored the warnings because asking for things like substantial down payments and income verification were just outdated, if not racist, homelending criteria.



Robert Gnaizda (see picture above), head of the Greenlining Institute, is given a lot of air time, arguing bankers were singularly responsible via their greedy, unregulated, predatory behavior. This shill for ninja loans is presented as a prescient advocate of sensible lending, when nothing could be further from the truth. The Greenlining Institute has been a lobbying and litigating group for 20 years. Greenlining’s principal aim is to push state and local politicians and the California business community to facilitate “community reinvestment” in low-income and minority neighborhoods.



Here's a description of one of their successes, written in August 2008:



But Greenlining can still play rough. Consider its dealings with Rabobank, an international Netherlands-based “megabank” (assets: $740 billion) that in early 2006 acquired Salinas-based Community Bank of Central California for $371 million.



Earlier, in November 2005, Rabobank had agreed to pay $851 million for another California bank, Mid-State Bancshares. At that time, Greenlining publicly demanded that Rabobank commit $7.5 billion for loan programs to help farmworkers buy their own farms. With only 40-some California branches, Rabobank balked.



Greenlining’s reply was a shot fired across the Dutch institution’s bow: “If Rabobank cannot reach an agreement to commit funding to CRA programs, the institute will oppose any further acquisitions it tries to make in California.” Greenlining then asked the Comptroller of the Currency to hold hearings into Rabobank’s acquisition of Mid-State and to require Rabobank to issue quarterly reports on its compliance with the CRA.



It also announced a protest demonstration. In February 2007, Latino and Southeast Asian farmers and farmworkers joined Greenlining organizers in a demonstration outside Rabobank’s Fresno, California offices. Backed by Mariachi and Hmong bands, the demonstrators waved placards and chanted slogans in English, Dutch, Spanish, and Hmong: “We’re Not a Dutch Colony!”, “Help de armen (Dutch for ‘Help the Poor’)” and “Geen immigranten schoppen (Dutch for ‘Don’t kick the immigrants’).” “Congratulations to everyone,” Greenlining’s Robert Gnaizda told demonstrators through a bullhorn, “Rabobank is totally afraid of you.” Apparently it is. This year, Greenlining proudly announced what it called a “unique agreement” with Rabobank “to turn San Joaquin farmworkers into farmowners.”




The net result of this was to prod mortgage lenders into lending to the easiest area where they could meet these goals: home mortgages. 'Predatory' lending, I suppose, is when a bank gives a loans to someone who can't afford it, and then has the gall to ask for their collateral after 500 days of non-payment. Gnaizda has spent his entire life arguing for lowering underwriting criteria (see here and here), and when he says 'increase regulation' he just means buyers should not have to pay supbrime rates, but rather prime rates, in other words, even easier terms.



It's fun to see history rewritten in real time. Everyone knows the diagnosis influences the cure, and if the zeitgeist is for more regulation the narrative has to be that the crisis was solely the cause of unregulated, greedy bankers, and presume that the selfless bureaucrats would have never let this happen. But bankers have always been greedy, what they didn't have was government not merely telling them that they should lower their underwriting standards, but that if they didn't they would be sued for disparate impact. Any CEO seeing this trend, and asking 'well, what have our losses been on these riskier home loans government wants us to make?', would have been told 'not much', because historically the collateral had always risen. That is, while default may have been high, recoveries were higher, and defaults were also masked by the higher collateral that made refinancing easier. In this environment, it is easy to see how banks slowly eliminated their previous lending criteria.

Saturday, May 28, 2011

Government at Work

Here in Minneapolis, the geniuses in charge of their underfunded police and fireman's pensions came up with this brilliant idea to merge their pensions into a different entity.:
The deal would allow the city to slash its police and fire pension liability. That's partly because it would switch them to the actuarial assumptions of the state fund, which assume higher investment returns and lower pension increases. It's also because the deal would give the city 11 more years than it has under current law to fully fund the two plans' deficits...
However, the deal would come with several costs for taxpayers. First, the city agreed not to oppose a firefighter bid for a last-minute boost in their pensions to bring them to parity with police. That would cost the city $7 million in future pension costs, figured in today's dollars.

Moreover, the deal would substantially boost the checks for police and fire pensioners, all of whom were hired before mid-1980. The police pension would jump by 43 percent to $64,000 in 2015, for example.

So, they actually increase their liability, but increase their assets via more optimistic return assumptions. That a bunch of adults find this solution attractive is rather disturbing.

Friday, May 27, 2011

The Advisor Weblog

The Advisor Weblog


Beginners Corner upcoming webinar

Posted: 27 May 2011 07:51 AM PDT

Hi all! I'm getting reading for today's Beginners Corner webinar at 17:00 GMT. Today we are going to talk about figures, when and when not to trust those, and a lot more stuff regarding trading them. As usual at the end, I will be asnwering questions and doubts. Hope you all join me there! Here is the link for the session:

 

http://www.fxstreet.com/webinars/sessions/session.aspx?id=fa6094b0-cb32-4d9f-9dd6-f952da7f941a


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Powerful Scene

Here's one of the most heartrending videos I've scene in my life, a widow's recollection of her heroic husband's last moments protecting her in the latest tornado disaster. If you don't tear up your not human. RIP Don Lansaw.

Wednesday, May 25, 2011

High Frequency Trading Paper

I'm involved in high frequency trading so I don't comment much on it anymore; it's good when not telling people all your ideas on some subject is the optimal strategy. But there's been a rather popular piece on a new metric of volatility by Easley, de Prado, and O'Hara, Flow Toxicity and Volatility in a High Frequency World, so it's not insider information. O'Hara has been writing on this topic for decades it seems, and she's a pretty solid author in this field. Indeed, as de Prado is associated with the Tudor Hedge fund, and they are OK with him publishing this, that highlights this information is not valuable in and of itself. But, lots of useful tools are not obviously translatable into money, so this is not a big knock.

Their Volume-Synchronized Probability of Informed Trading, or the VPIN informed trading metric, is as follows:

It's hard to see in the gif, but the numeration has Vb is the volume of buys, which are assumed to when the price of a trade is greater than or equal to the last trade price, Vs, or Volume of Sells, otherwise. Thus, the greater the imbalance of buys vs sells in the past, say, 10000 shares traded, the greater this metric. These all occur within the past V shares traded in any bucket. n is the number of number of buckets in the sample. Thus, the estimation is in transaction space, not time space, which the authors assert is more stable and meaningful.

The graph below shows how this metric forecasts future trade volatility. Note that as the log of the VPIN goes up, the dispersion of price moves increases. It's not a perfect relationship, but nothing important is.

The point is that in fast moving markets, one needs something a little better than simple historical moving averages of daily closing prices. This is better, and extending the idea of 'volume time' vs. 'chronological time' is an intriguing direction. But one can also look at bid-ask spreads directly, or the VIX futures, or its etf, the VXX, and combinations, to gauge intraday volatility as well. Further, one can better estimate 'buy volume' using the transaction price relative to the then extant bid-ask spread, rather than if the price was weakly increasing, though this then involves syncing the trade information with quote information, and for academics such data are often hard to come by (further, quote information is often 10 times as large).

The Advisor Weblog

The Advisor Weblog


The Beginners Corner tricks and tips

Posted: 25 May 2011 08:31 AM PDT

 

Hi all my friends! I would love to share with you all some of the things we discuss in the Beginners Corner every Friday, tips for market, interesting questions, ect that are always good to remember. So here comes the first:

While Canada is among the 10 biggest producers of oil in the world, Japan is a net oil importer. So when we see strong movements in oil like early this month, the best pair to trade is CADJPY: the cross rose over 1300 pips in less than a month, from the all time low set at 76.80 area following Japan earthquake. Oil rising near $ 115 a barrel was the trigger and the lead. In the same time frame USD/CAD lost near 550 pips, while USD/JPY added @ 900 pips.

 

If you have any question regarding forex trading, feel free to email me to valeria@fxstreet.com. Will be posting answers here daily basis.

 


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Majors outlook for the US session

Posted: 25 May 2011 07:31 AM PDT

Euro lost its charm on more and more Greece jitters, while AUD/USD below 1.0500 (38.2% retracement of this year bullish run) is neither an interesting buy, so Pound seems to be getting all the attention and heading towards strong 1.6300 area, as long as above 1.6220 immediate support. Swiss Franc is also strong yet now, only below 0.8730 we could see strong bearish movements now.

USD/JPY, is capped below 100 DMA, while poor Euro seems heading to 1.3860 expected area.

 

Here is the full report with all the technical points:

 

http://www.fxstreet.com/technical/analysis-reports/currency-majors-technical-perspective/2011/05/25/03/


Risk aversion easing in the European morning

Posted: 25 May 2011 05:07 AM PDT

Hi everyone and welcome back! Dollar is losing early Asian momentum, as European markets are off yeterday's lows. GBP/USD managed to break above 1.6220 and continues tending higher, while EUR/USD remains mostly weak, limited to the upside by the 20 SMA in the 4 hours chart with a strong bearish tone. ( You can see the technical perspective for today here: http://www.fxstreet.com/technical/forex-strategy/the-best-pair-to-trade-now/2011/05/25/ )

Commodities are also positive, favoring dollar losses, yet market is waiting for the US Durable Orders report, in less than 30 minutes: a negative reading could send stocks back down, and favor a dollar recovery, but rather wait and see. If you want to go for the greenback, maybe Euro, Aud or Cad are the best choices, while if you preffer to sell poor dollar, Pound and Swissy seem to be the preferred ones.

 

Here is the link for today's calendar:

 

http://www.fxstreet.com/fundamental/economic-calendar/

 

Have a great trading day!


Tuesday, May 24, 2011

The Advisor Weblog

The Advisor Weblog


USD/CHF technical perspective

Posted: 24 May 2011 04:24 AM PDT

No matter what happens with the dollar, Swiss Franc continues to be among the stronger currencies of the board, still inside its' long term bearish trend.

 

 

Here is the intraday view and levels for the pair:

 

http://www.fxstreet.com/technical/forex-strategy/the-best-pair-to-trade-now/2011/05/24/


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Starting the day

Posted: 24 May 2011 02:53 AM PDT

Hi everyone and welcome back to this blog. Despite the shy bounces in majors against the greenback seen following European opening, dollar has managed to extend gains to new monthly highs against high yields Euro, Pound and Aussie. Current dollar strength has more of Euro weakness than anything else: the euro zone sovereign debt jitters had been hitting euro over and over, day after day. Monday saw the EUR/USD reaching 1.3970 after worse than expected PMI readings in Germany and France. Flitch rating agency downgraded Belgium to AA+, while stocks slide across the world, adding to the euro negative tone. Tuesday however, is seeing some better mood across the board, as stocks are positive, and dollar down, with EUR/USD near 1.4100. Both 1 and 4 hours chart show a slightly bullish tone, with 1.4140 as immediate resistance area. Clearly above, rally may extend near 1.4200 before getting exhausted to the upside. Below 1.4070, the downside will be favored towards 1.4020 price zone.


GBP/USD stands above 1.6100, limited by 1.6160 area yet heading slightly higher. Clearly above the pair may extend gains near 1.6220 area, but further gains are not clear at this point. Below 1.6100 on contrary, the slide may reach 1.6040, and 1.5970 later.


Here is the link for today's calendar:

http://www.fxstreet.com/fundamental/economic-calendar/


Have a great trading day!


Congressmen Have the Buffet Touch

A new study out notes that:

Four university researchers examined 16,000 common stock transactions made by approximately 300 House representatives from 1985 to 2001, and found what they call "significant positive abnormal returns," with portfolios based on congressional trades beating the market by about 6 percent annually.
...
A study of senators by the same team of researchers five years ago found members of the higher chamber even better at beating the market -- outperforming it by about 10 percent, an amount the academics said was "both economically large and statistically significant."

I suppose they are good at stock investing for the same reason Hillary Clinton was a savvy commodities trader, and Obama was good at playing poker with Illinois lobbyists.

If the guys who set my property taxes want to bet on something, anything, I'm willing to post great odds. Just be sure to remember me, you know, later.

Update: Toronto PhD student Feng Chi has recently published an independent analysis with a similar results, see here.

27% Borrow Against 401ks


According to CNN:

In 2010, nearly 28% of those with 401(k)s had loans outstanding on them, a record high, according to a recent study by Aon Hewitt, a consulting firm owned by Aon Corp. The average loan was $7,860.

This is generally not a good idea, like the stats on credit card balances (average of $7k for families with credit cards). Just one more problem to be solved by our future inflation!

The main financial problems for average consumers are within themselves: they trade too much, have too much debt. If I believed in libertarian paternalism as in Cass Sunstein's Nudge, I would be for increasing various costs of trading and borrowing to alleviate this. Yet, the the costs would undoubtedly be stacked towards politically powerful but economically unwise investments (eg, ethanol, mortgages), and people would learn they are not responsible for themselves. One of the costs of freedom is the pain of learning by experience.

But some people don't learn, or only via trial-and-error, which is unfortunate. Our modern welfare state makes it harder for these people because many of them need powerful negative feedback to change behavior, and generally people who don't have life skills get encouragement to self-righteous self-pity.

Sunday, May 22, 2011

Asians Learning 'The Neg'

In a fascinating essay in the New York Magazine, an Asian writer Wesley Yang talks about coming out of his timid shell:



I recall one of the strangest conversations I had in the city. A woman came up to me at a party and said she had been moved by a piece of writing I had published. She confessed that prior to reading it, she had never wanted to talk to me, and had always been sure, on the basis of what she could see from across the room, that I was nobody worth talking to, that I was in fact someone to avoid.



But she had been wrong about this, she told me: It was now plain to her that I was a person with great reserves of feeling and insight. She did not ask my forgiveness for this brutal misjudgment. Instead, what she wanted to know was—why had I kept that person she had glimpsed in my essay so well hidden? She confessed something of her own hidden sorrow: She had never been beautiful and had decided, early on, that it therefore fell to her to “love the world twice as hard.” Why hadn’t I done that?


The piece goes on to note Asians promoting a 'neg' strategy towards Americans, and giving paid advice on the tactic. The idea of a smart young man discovering he had needed to be more obstreperous I find rather interesting. Is it simply prudent to be less considerate of others? Is appearing aloof and disrespectful of others a smart tactic to make you more more powerful, more financially successful? This concept has been popularized in the neg, a tactic of sexual swindle by making the target think you think you are better than them, which makes them find you more attractive.



The neg seems most likely to work on insecure, below-excellent, targets, which might be sufficient for a young man looking for sex, but not necessarily a good life strategy. Then again, most people meet their spouses in inauspicious scenarios, and just this weekend I learned of a woman whose first date with her now husband involved him getting into an almost fight with another man--clearly this display was impressive.



But as for the woman taking her lack of beauty as a reason to love the world twice as much, I'm skeptical this is the optimal response. Rather, I think she should simply accept that unlike the Halle Barrys of the world, not everyone will appreciate her attractiveness, and not be discouraged by it. It seems a very Biblical assertion that the more you suffer the more you love the Creator who allows such suffering. Anyway, I like that the woman had a strategy that tried to compensate for her realistic constraints, but I think except in extreme circumstances, a person is never objectively ugly, but rather, merely not beautiful.



Most of us, including me, aren't beautiful like models and movie stars. We are a totality, usually sufficiently attractive to make our objective appearance irrelevant to whether a worthy evaluator considers us beautiful irrespective of our thoughts, behaviors, and manners. I think if my daughter becomes an 'unattractive' woman, I will still think of her as beautiful because I appreciate her essence. Her optimal strategy should not be to love more, but rather, be as attractive as possible--maximize her potential as a person--and find people who appreciate her.

Mark Zandi's Prognostication Prowess

I came across this at Ritholz, which noted that popular Keynesian economist pundit Mark Zandi has a horrible track record. The problem with pundits is that rarely do people care, and like Jim Cramer you just predict so often it's not obvious what your forecasts were.

Obama Meddles in Israel


A good starting point for the idea that our government shouldn't try to fix everything, is foreign policy, which is even harder than economic policy. It's important to know what is and isn't our Federal government's business.

Jimmy Carter and Noam Chomsky are perfectly consistent when they argue for UN Security Council Resolution 242 because they believe in redistribution of money and power based on inequalities they believe are the result of illegitimate expropriations. The rich, in general, are the beneficiaries of previous injustices.

Historically American Jews have voted Democratic, and exit polls showed 77% voted for Obama in 2008. It certainly is politically beneficial to present yourself as a persecuted minority if you can, and just like African-Americans Jews are a minority. In the long run, this won't stand because Jews are relatively successful, and so via inevitable liberal logic they are a hegemon who needs to share their wealth. Obama's call for a return to 1967 borders seems a consistent stand within the Democratic party, and especially the very progressive US State Department.

Saturday, May 21, 2011

End of World Note

Considering the world will end at 6 pm local time today, you should remember the South Park episode 'Probably', where everyone goes to hell. At one point the newcomers to Hell are being informed they were damned. One guy says 'hey, wait a minute, I shouldn't be here, I was a totally strict and devout Protestant, I thought we went to heaven?' The tour guide says 'you picked the wrong religion.' The correct group ... Mormons! I'm hoping that's not how it goes down, but we'll see soon enough.

Friday, May 20, 2011

The Advisor Weblog

The Advisor Weblog


Beginners' Corner upcoming webinar

Posted: 20 May 2011 08:33 AM PDT

At 17:00 GMT, we are going to have another Beginner's Corner session, where I will discuss the different tools technical analysis offers to determinate support and resistance levels. Also remember, we have a late session of questions, where I will try help you with any doubt about forex market.

 

Here is the link for the session:

 

http://www.fxstreet.com/webinars/sessions/session.aspx?id=45bf8686-4535-4f42-ae73-1bda8060eb0a

 

See you there!

 

 

 


EUR/USD: another selloff on Greece jitters

Posted: 20 May 2011 03:55 AM PDT

EUR/USD once again failled to hold above 1.4300, yet still the downside remains limited in the short term, by 1.4250, and in the longer, by past week low @ 1.4040.

 

 

Here are the intraday levels to take care of:

 

http://www.fxstreet.com/technical/forex-strategy/the-best-pair-to-trade-now/2011/05/20/

 


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Starting the day

Posted: 20 May 2011 02:31 AM PDT

Hi everyone! Risk aversion continues easing slowly, dragging dollar down across the board, although so far rises in high yield currencies had been pretty much limited, with Euro and Pound unable to gain bullish momentum. Commodity currencies have a better tone, with AUD/USD nearing 1.0700 and USD/CAD around 0.9640 area, and signaling a continuation, while Swiss Franc and Yen, despite bullish against dollar, had hardly managed to move from past Asian opening levels.

 
EUR/USD quotes just above 1.4300, with 1.4345, daily high as immediate resistance ahead of 1.4380/1.4410 area. Strong support comes at 1.4250, so only below that last a retest of 1.4200 and some bearish pressure seems likely.


GBP/USD despite gaining more ground continues trading below 1.6300 recent highs and strong static area. Unless clear consolidation above, the upside should remain limited. Next resistances come at 1.6345 and 1.6380 area, not seen for today. Supports, are located at 1.6230 1.6190 area, and 1.6150.


Strong fundamental data will be published in Canada, where CPI readings could trigger a selloff in USD/CAD if much higher than expected, as seen in previous month. Here is the link for today's calendar:


http://www.fxstreet.com/fundamental/economic-calendar/


Have a great trading day!