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Articles tagged with: Hussman

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[21 Jul 2009 | One Comment | ]
Tending Your Investment Garden

“Consciousness is said to be a field; a plot of land in which every kind of seed has been planted – seeds of suffering, happiness, joy, sorrow, fear, anger, and hope. The quality of our life depends on which of these seeds we water. The practice of mindfulness is to recognize each seed as it sprouts, and to water the most wholesome seeds whenever possible.” Thich Nhat Hanh

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[10 Jun 2009 | No Comment | ]
S&P 500 Trading Volumes Decline

Volume tends to expand in the main direction of the trend. In a bull market, advances accompanied by increasing volume or declines on diminishing volume are taken to be bullish. Conversly, in a bear market, declines are accompanied by increasing volume and advances show diminishing volume. Volume should always be studied as a trend (relative to what has preceded). – Richard Russell, The Dow Theory Today

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[10 Nov 2008 | 3 Comments | ]

Today I have been reading lots of comments on a market bottom. Each time I started to compose a reply to say it is a waste of time, but I couldn’t find the right words. I wasn’t going to bother linking to John Hussman’s weekly market comment anymore, but I was gobsmacked when I just read his comments this week. He had no problem finding the words I was after.
“With the S&P 500 down nearly 40% from last year’s highs, and now trading modestly above 10 times last year’s peak …

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[15 Oct 2008 | One Comment | ]
Where does this path lead us?

In the short term I’m not sure where our current path leads us. However, in the long term stocks are currently cheap and should provide excellent returns. Plus a free copy of Margin of Safety.

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[7 Oct 2008 | No Comment | ]

With the S&P 500 trading below 1100, the U.S. stock market is now in the upper range of what I consider to be reasonable valuations. Stocks are certainly not “cheap” or undervalued overall, but they are no longer priced to deliver unacceptably poor long-term returns. I have no strong belief that stocks have reached a bottom.
Ditto for my sentiments. However as per my heavy investment today I do have a strong conviction that we are at or near a short term low.
Hussman provides an update on his projections for 10-year …

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[30 Sep 2008 | One Comment | ]

You Can’t Rescue the Financial System If You Can’t Read a Balance Sheet
This is a bad idea.
However the final legislation is written, the Troubled Assets Relief Program (TARP) being rushed through Congress will evidently be built around its single worst provision, which is that the Treasury will have authority to purchase distressed mortgage securities from U.S. financials.
… Buffett’s investment may reflect confidence in Goldman, particularly with a government backstop on whatever questionable assets it does own, but if anything, it suggests that the government should have gone the same …

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[25 Sep 2008 | No Comment | ]

Similarly, market bottoms are created because investors stop looking for a bottom, and extrapolate ongoing bad news. If you remember the lows of 1982, or 1990-1991, or 2002, you’ll recall that in each instance, the question among investors wasn’t whether the economy would recover in one quarter versus two quarters. The question was how the economy could recover at any point in the foreseeable future. Investors give up hope at bottoms.
Have you given up?
nah, me either. That should concern anyone on margin.

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[22 Sep 2008 | No Comment | ]

In 2006, the president of the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis noted “Everyone knows that a policy of bailouts will increase their number.” This week, Congress is being asked to hastily consider a monstrous bailout plan on a scale nearly equivalent to the existing balance sheet of the Federal Reserve. Read the rest of Hussman’s Open Letter to the U.S. Congress Regarding the Current Financial Crisis.

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[15 Sep 2008 | One Comment | ]

John Hussman discusses Lehman and how “Only the Stock and Bond Holders Should Expect Losses (Not Customers)”. Read the full weekly market comment here.
It’s important to recognize that the timing of the stress at Lehman is not a coincidence independent of the Fannie and Freddie bailout. Rather, the U.S. government essentially sent an information signal that highly leveraged financial institutions were insolvent. Next to Bear Stearns, Lehman had the highest gross leverage multiple on the street (the continuing problem is that several others are quite close). Last week, Lehman reported …

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[9 Sep 2008 | No Comment | ]

John Hussman is sticking to the story of recession and market not pricing that in. Read the full story here.
Great graph of the unemployment rate mapped against history with start of recession drawn in a T-8 months.
“we can expect the unemployment rate to move substantially higher over the coming 6-8 months.”
Hussman’s take on Fannie and Freddie bailout, his rates reset graph and thoughts, like this;
the Market Climate for stocks remained characterized by unfavorable valuations and unfavorable market action, holding the Strategic Growth Fund to a fully hedged investment stance. The …