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Tuesday, April 29, 2008

The Dow is set for a tumble

The Dow Jones is fast approaching another resistance level at 13,000 points. After a good rally from 11,800 pts the Dow is set to return to those levels in coming weeks. I dont see it breaking 13,000 points. The reason is high oil prices and likely flagging consumer & business sentiment.
It is possible that the market might be encouraged by the prospect of Ben Bernacke not immediately raising interest rates, irrespective of whether this easy money is not supporting any new lending, not to business at least. What else can you do with easy money but speculate. Surely this money is going to end up driving gold prices higher, and probably oil, despite it at some point collapsing due to economic malaise. I would not be surprised if the market shrugs off high oil prices, higher inflation numbers and rallies through resistance.
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Andrew Sheldon www.sheldonthinks.com

Bond yields breaking downtrend?

Some interesting developments in markets of late. The real yields on long-winded treasuries have broken their downtrend after the US Federal Reserve engaged in subsidising of the banking system for a time. Does this herald a period of rising interest rates? If you are worried about gold investments, result assured that inflationary pressures will keep Ben Bernacke well behind the curve. I suggest these rates will pull back when new inflation numbers are presented. I think the Fed is not likely to raise rates just yet, and I think these yields will fall once again.
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Andrew Sheldon www.sheldonthinks.com

Wednesday, April 23, 2008

The outlook for an Australian economy

I congratulate Ross Gittins on his article “Everything's coming up roses” in the SMH Online (23/4/08) where he identifies the positive outlook for the Australian economy. There were several omissions though I would like to add:
1. He saids nothing about the positive outlook for Australian food exports, which will add to the glowing outlook for Australian minerals demand
2. Gittins and a number of other people talk about the 2 billion Indians and Chinese people as if they are one market. The notion that half the world’s population is growing at 10% is alluring I am sure, but lets not forget that a great many of them are living the same way as they always have. There is likely one member of the family working in the city sending back a paltry $1/day, given the higher cost of living in the city. The cultural difference between these regions is actually more important than the political boundaries.
3. We might wonder where the metal will come from to give the Chinese and Indians the equivalent standards of living in 20-30 years time. We can also be sure that they will achieve prosperity faster than any economy before. We should not forget however that some of that ‘productivity bonus’ will arise because we are using more compact electronic devices, which cost less but also use consume much less metal. Might we also expect higher recycling levels as we see greater standardisation of computer components. These are the aspect of the ‘growth story’ which are not discussed so much. Everyone only talks the upside. But these are great times for Australia to be sure.

In all other respects this is a good article and it should be read for some insights, or just as a reminder of Australia’s place in the world.

Sunday, April 13, 2008

Dubious disclosure record by regulators

It was just last night I was discussing with someone why we shouldn't have taxation. Taxation = coercion = no accountability. More surprisingly still is when a journalist does some critical thinking, so my hat goes for to Michael West at the Sydney Morning Herald. If only they gave his looser deadlines so he could do some investigative journalism, so he might have exposed this story before the failure of yet another financial services company. See ASX & ASIC Disclosure.

I am well versed with the ASX's lack of interest in disclosure rules or guidelines, so it does not surprise me that they should have slipped up. I have just one experience dealing with ASIC. I registered a complaint against a company CEO for misleading the market in an attempt to raise capital. ASIC said there was no case to answer. I suggest because the evidence was not conclusive enough. The problem is that few resources are going to regulating compliance because it all goes on welfare statism which includes corporate subsidies as well. So in this case the best I could do was make this CEO hyperventilate at the company AGM. I doubt that will slow him down. He struck me as the type of guy with friends in the right place.
What a turgid, fascist world we live in....never mind the rhetoric that we have never been freer. The animal has just changed its chamouflage.
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Andrew Sheldon www.sheldonthinks.com

ASX All Ords likely to consolidate in short term

I see the Australian All Ordinaries Equities Index consolidating over the next week. I dare say there will be some volatility, but the market index will likely go sideways. The broader market will likely be weaker, but the resources sector should hold up reasonably well.
I actually see the current market as a good time to buy 'spec' resources, while I would be trading out of blue chips to re-enter the market in a few weeks. I made the point about 8 months ago that this was a traders market. Alot of volatility. This is NOT a market for the 'buy & hold' strategy.
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Andrew Sheldon www.sheldonthinks.com

Dow heading back to 11,650 point level

The Dow Jones took a tumble in Friday trading from 12,579 to 12,325, a fall of 254 points. The fall confirms previous sentiments that the Dow would fail to break out into a new uptrend. Instead we are looking at the Dow heading back to 11,650 pt support set on the 23rd January 2008.
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Andrew Sheldon www.sheldonthinks.com

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Investment Strategy

If you are investing for the long term, you still need an investment strategy. Dont be fooled by the rhetoric of fund managers. The reason they advise you to 'buy & hold' is because they dont want to compete with you in sell-offs. Markets and industrial sectors are cyclical, so they demand trading to get the best returns. Fund managers actually cant hope to match the performance of small investors (if you are half good) because they have to manage huge amounts of funds and charge you a fee besides.
MY ADVICE is (i) look at a range of market indices and decide upon what level of correction would give you the justification you need to get in & out of the market. It might be a 5-10% retracement or a break of trend. (ii) Diversify if you dont have an intimate knowledge of the company or management. More than 30% in one company is aggressive.

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