Market Review 21.6.12

Source: ForexYard

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The US dollar was able to avoid significant losses in overnight trading, after the Fed extended its bond buying program but did not announce a new round of quantitative easing. Meanwhile, crude oil took heavy losses after the release of a significantly bigger than expected US Crude Oil Inventories figure yesterday. Crude is currently trading below $81 a barrel. Today, in addition to US news, investors will likely be shifting their focus back to the euro-zone, and in particular the ongoing banking troubles in Spain.

Main News for Today

US Unemployment Claims- 12:30 GMT
• Unemployment continues to impeded the US economic recovery
• If today’s figure comes in above the expected 381K, the dollar could fall against its main currency rivals

US Existing Home Sales- 14:00 GMT
• Existing home sales are forecasted to come in below last month’s figure
• If true, the dollar could take losses against the JPY in evening trading

US Philly Fed Manufacturing Index- 14:00 GMT
• Manufacturing is one of the few sectors of the US economy that continues to expand
• Today’s figure is forecasted to come in well above last month’s
• If true, the dollar may see some gains during afternoon trading

Read more forex news on our forex blog

Forex Market Analysis provided by ForexYard.

© 2006 by FxYard Ltd

Disclaimer: Trading Foreign Exchange carries a high level of risk and may not be suitable for all investors. There is a possibility that you could sustain a loss of all of your investment and therefore you should not invest money that you cannot afford to lose. You should be aware of all the risks associated with Foreign Exchange trading.

Don’t Let the Fed Fool You, This Isn’t the Time to Abandon the Market

By MoneyMorning.com.au

‘One picture is worth ten thousand words’ – Fred R. Barnard, Printers’ Ink, 10 March 1927

We don’t always agree with that statement. We write about 1,000 words each day for Money Morning, so if we could send you one picture a fortnight, it would make our job a lot easier.

Of course, while it may be easier for us, it would be less useful for you, and you’d soon turn off.

But sometimes a picture really is worth ten thousand words. This morning we saw a picture that condenses the past four years of stock market action into just two-and-a-half hours of market action.

In fact, if we’ve read this right, it could be the single most important image you see as it could reveal how the market will behave for the rest of the year…

Last night the U.S. Federal Reserve finished a two-day meeting. Beforehand the market was on edge…what would the Fed do?

Would it print more money?

Would it announce a change to interest rates?

Or would it announce an extension of the so-called Operation Twist program?

When it came down to it, the market got, well, exactly what it expected. As the following picture shows:


Click here to enlarge

Source: Google Finance

The black cross marks the time the Fed released its statement. The red line stretches from half an hour before the announcement to two hours after the announcement.

During that time, the market performed pretty much as it has done for the past four years. Traders (including short-sellers) and investors positioned themselves leading into the statement.

When the statement revealed no new money printing, the market sold off…but then recovered as short-sellers covered, realising the market wasn’t going to fall as much as they thought, and buyers bought cheap.

As the day continued, sellers sold as they realised the market didn’t have the momentum to rally much further. So by 2.30pm the market was back to where it was at noon…a lot of effort, time and money was expended, but the market had gone nowhere.

Even after a sell-off later in the day, the market still rallied to only close down by 0.17%.

In other words, what the market did in the space of two-and-a-half hours last night perfectly reflects what the market has done for the past four years…and what it will probably do for the next six months…and probably longer.

You could call it the ‘Treadmill Effect’.

The Fed Adds a Little Juice to the Stock Market

If you’ve ever seen anyone on a treadmill at the gym you’ll know how it works. They get on there, jog and then run like the clappers for 20 or 30 minutes. The sweat is pouring off them and they look knackered.

Yet they’re still exactly where they were at the start of the exercise. And it’s the same for the market and investors.

So, what does this tell you?

It tells you the Fed is playing around with the runner on the treadmill. When they see the market fall, they want to make sure the runner doesn’t fall off the end of the treadmill…so they juice the runner up a bit.

In this case, the Fed is fiddling around with ‘Operation Twist’.

As the Fed notes in its statement:

‘The Committee intends to purchase Treasury securities with remaining maturities of 6 years to 30 years at the current pace and to sell or redeem an equal amount of Treasury securities with remaining maturities of approximately 3 years or less. This continuation of the maturity extension program should put downward pressure on longer-term interest rates and help to make broader financial conditions more accommodative.’

In short, the Fed wants to lower longer-term interest rates to encourage businesses and homeowners to take out long term loans. Although you have to ask just how low the Fed wants these rates to go.

Already the yield on a US 10-year bond is just 1.63%. And if you want to invest in a US 30-year bond you’ll only get a 2.71% return.

That’s pretty slim pickings in return for locking your money away for 30 years.

Earlier this week, our old pal, Dr. Alex Cowie wrote to you about ‘Greece Fatigue’. He said the market was getting bored by all the news about Greece.

Well, right now the Fed is doing a pretty good job with ‘QE Fatigue’. That is, investors have been looking forward to it for so long and anticipating it so often that they’re getting fatigued. ‘Are we there yet?’ the market asks each month. ‘Not yet,’ the Fed replies.

Don’t Hold Your Breath for the Fed, But it Will Happen

Remember, the last time the Fed hinted at money printing was August 2010. It then started printing money to buy bonds in November 2010. That’s nearly two years ago. Yet each month since then the market has looked for the Fed to buy more bonds.

So far investors have been disappointed. Even the ‘Operation Twist’ and the ‘Return of Operation Twist’ aren’t what the market is really after. It’s just fiddling around the edges.

Our bet is that the Fed is happy with the manipulative role it’s playing. It’s teasing the market…stringing investors along. It’s not ruling anything out, but it’s not yet ruling money-printing in.

Investors have reacted to this by not selling stocks as much as you’d perhaps expect. And short-sellers are reluctant to drive prices down too.

Why? Because they’re afraid of missing out. What if the Fed prints tomorrow? The market could climb 5% or 10% in one day. No-one wants to miss that. And short-sellers don’t want to be caught short if the Fed decides to print another half-a-trillion dollars.

Ultimately, the Fed will print again. It’s just a matter of when. Odds are it will come at the point when the market is fed-up of asking. When buyers just don’t believe it will ever happen, and short-sellers finally pluck up the courage to place big bets.

So don’t hold your breath for money printing just yet. As we said yesterday, don’t bet your house on the market, but you should have some exposure to stocks. Because once the market is truly fatigued of waiting you can expect the Fed to hit the market hard…and you won’t want to miss that rally.

Cheers,
Kris.

Related Articles

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Don’t Let the Fed Fool You, This Isn’t the Time to Abandon the Market

Have Spanish Bonds Passed The Point of No Return?

By MoneyMorning.com.au

Any relief over the Greek elections completely bypassed the Spanish bond market. The ten-year yield on Spain’s bonds went above 7% earlier this week, the level which many view as ‘the point of no return.’

The cost of insuring against a Spanish default in the next five years also increased, and is now over 600bps. Yesterday’s auction of Spanish bonds also went badly. Although the government sold its stated target of $3bn, it did so at sky-high interest rates. Indeed, the rate on one-year bonds was over 2% higher than it was a month ago.

So do these spiking yields mean that a default – or yet another Spanish bail-out – is inevitable?

Why Spanish Bond Yields Are Rising

The immediate reason for the rise in Spanish bond yields is concern about the Spanish banking system. When the European Union (EU) gave Spain a $100bn loan to bail out its banks it asked it to carry out a bank audit. However, Madrid has now decided to delay it. This has raised suspicions that Spanish banks are in even more trouble that has been assumed. Indeed, the percentage of bad loans has risen to 8.72%, an 18-year high.

At the same time, people are pulling deposits out of Spain’s banks. This means that $100bn, which Madrid always claimed was a high figure, may not be enough. Alberto Gallo, senior European credit strategist at RBS, thinks that ‘Spanish banks will need to generate €134bn of capital over the next three years, on rising bad loans and increasing regulation.’

So why does it matter? As Spanish bond yields rise, the more expensive refinancing debt becomes. In turn this will push up the deficit (the country’s annual overspend) – making it harder for countries to bring the overall debt under control.

In the worst case scenario, this cycle can quickly spin out of control, with soaring rates and debt feeding off each other. If interest rates get too high, then Spain’s economy will be forced to either seek EU help or default – similar to what happened to Greece.

Capital Economics thinks that the second option – defaulting – is ‘virtually inevitable.’ However, it is not clear what the terms will be. Indeed, ‘there are major uncertainties over the likely size of such a Spanish bail-out, how it would be financed and what resources would be left to meet the requirements of other troubled countries.’

One cynical view is that Spain’s plight will force the EU to drop any pretence of imposing further cuts. Having pledged so much already it can’t afford to admit that it made a mistake. The idea of a “banking union”, where the EU as a whole, rather than individual countries, bails out banks is gaining popularity. Indeed, the G-20 summit has agreed that, ‘Euro Area members of the G20 will take all necessary measures to safeguard the integrity and stability of the area.’

Meanwhile, papers are filled with reports that Germany has agreed that the European Financial Stability Facility (EFSF) will be allowed to directly buy bonds of heavily indebted countries. As much as $600bn of EU cash could be used, with the aim of driving down Spanish, Italian and Greek interest rates.

However, this may be a step too far. Germany has not formally agreed to the use of the EFSF – only to ‘discussions’. Indeed, these leaks about possible action are so vague that they may be a bluff designed to boost confidence.

If the deal does take place, Angela Merkel will have to explain her action to her coalition partners who are pushing her to stand firm. Germany’s highest court has also ruled that parliament must also approve any deal. Ironically, Berlin is also insisting that its regional banks be exempt from any ‘banking union’.

Will the Euro Fragment?

So, it looks as though the rising Spanish bond yields are a vote of no confidence in the future of the euro – as well as Spain. As Nicholas Spiro of Spiro Sovereign Strategy puts it, ‘the crisis is increasingly no longer about Spain. It’s about the fear that the eurozone is going to fall apart because of the absence of a fiscal and banking union. The market has become increasingly binary: backstop or break-up.’

A break-up would not necessarily be bad news for the southern European countries. Devaluation would enable them to become more competitive in a quicker and potentially less painful manner. It would also act as the spur for the ECB to take concrete measures to boost the money supply in the rest of the eurozone.

However, with politicians unable to accept the notion of either a break-up or a fully-blown, decisive union as yet, we suspect there will be many more spasms of panic for markets to endure before the eurozone crisis comes to any sort of conclusion.

Matthew Partridge
Contributing Editor, Money Morning

Publisher’s Note: This article originally appeared in MoneyWeek (UK).

From the Archives…

The Problem With the Spanish Bailout
2012-06-15 – Keith Fitz-Gerald

Australian Housing – How to Avoid This Pauper’s Retirement Trap
2012-06-14 – Kris Sayce

Why Warren Buffett is Loading Up on Tungsten
2012-06-13 – Don Miller

China’s Economic Data Statistics: Just Add Salt
2012-06-12 – Dr. Alex Cowie

Why Graphite is One of the Few Places For Savvy Investors to Make Money
2012-06-11 – Dr. Alex Cowie


Have Spanish Bonds Passed The Point of No Return?

Free Banking: The Key to a Stable Financial System

By MoneyMorning.com.au

Free banking offers a radical take on banking: banks should be treated like any other business. Free banks would be free to print their own money and lend it as they pleased. There’d be no central banks, no deposit insurance, and no banking regulations (not that the ones we have today worked especially well).

The central idea of free banking is that private banks would be free to issue as much currency as they liked. Your cash would carry the insignia of HSBC, say, rather than the Queen. That money would be a claim on some fundamental unit of money, which would form the bank’s reserves. This might be gold, or it could even be fiat money. But whatever it was, the unit of reserve would – crucially – be fixed, and the entire money system would be overlaid upon it.

Getting rid of central banks sounds extreme to most modern ears – we’ve known nothing but central banks. We have them for three main reasons: firstly, to keep inflation in check; secondly, to stabilise the banking system in a crisis (this is their ‘lender of last resort’ function); and thirdly, to keep overall spending in the economy stable.

Free bankers say that central banks not only fail to perform these three functions, but in fact have the exact opposite effect. Indeed, they reckon that the best way to achieve these three goals is to dismantle the central banks. Here’s why.

If Not the Banks… Who’d Watch Inflation?

Inflation happens when money in circulation grows faster than the economy’s ability to produce. To put it simply, the amount of money being spent rises faster than the amount of ‘stuff’, so the amount of money you have to pay per item of ‘stuff’ goes up.

Under free banking, however, a bank that printed too much money relative to its reserves would quickly go out of business. The bank’s notes would circulate through the system and end up at other banks, who’d call in the profligate bank’s underlying reserves. When the reserves ran out, the bank would be finished and its shareholders and creditors would be wiped out.

Fixed reserves throughout the system would provide the discipline. That simple constraint would prevent the money supply from outstripping the economy’s ability to produce. Next question!

If Not the Banks… Who’d Act as the Lender of Last Resort?

A system of unregulated private banks printing money and collapsing willy-nilly sounds like trouble. So what would prevent financial crises in a free banking system?

Free bankers argue that you wouldn’t need anyone to do so. The lender of last resort function is a next-best solution which is only made necessary because our current system is so flawed. They argue that a free banking system would be far less prone to crashes and panics.

How? Because ordinary depositors would be putting their savings at risk – without deposit insurance, you could lose all your cash if a bank went bust. This possibility of small-scale bank failure, and depositors being forced to eat the losses, would, they say, prevent large-scale bank failures, which end up with taxpayers eating the losses.

Our banking regulation is currently geared around protecting the creditor in the name of stability. If you deposit money at a bank, the state insures it, in the name of stability. If a bank wobbles, the central bank will buy its dodgy assets and lend freely as needed, in the name of stability. If a bank collapses, taxpayers take the hit and recoup creditors in full, all in the name of stability.

So the ‘stability’ of our current system is predicated on creditors never having to take a loss. That sounds like a sensible idea. But this is where ‘moral hazard’ – that much derided concept – comes in.

Because the ordinary depositor knows he won’t lose money, he pays scant attention to the quality of his bank (you only need to look at what happened with Icesave, the Icelandic bank, for proof of this).

In turn, because his banker realises the institution is backstopped by the government and the central bank, he has little incentive to lend prudently. He chases business quantity at the cost of business quality.

So the risk of a small individual default is passed along the chain to the very top of the financial system, and it is amplified by moral hazard at every stage.

This moral hazard means that the government is forced to regulate the banks, because they have no interest in restraining themselves. The trouble here is that ultimately, the banks capture their regulators, and get away with running wild. Again, for proof here, you just need to consider Hank Paulson (who later became US Treasury Secretary) and his successful lobbying efforts to have investment banks’ capital ratios lowered in 2005.

Free bankers argue that to prevent this, everybody in the financial system must face some chance of losing their money. Attempts to insulate us from losses for stability’s sake may seem admirable, but in fact it’s these attempts that make the system unstable.

The resulting losses snowball, becoming big, systemic and public instead of small, localised and private. Free bankers argue that the existence of a central bank backstop inevitably creates moral hazard and that moral hazard ultimately sinks the system.

Nothing precludes healthy private banks from rescuing solvent but illiquid banks under a free banking system, acting as a sort of private lender of last resort. Indeed, the experience of free banking – which operated in the Scotland of Adam Smith’s time for a period of roughly 150 years – was of overall financial stability, with small isolated failures and private losses.

If Not the Banks… Who’d Keep the Economy Stable ?

Under free banking, money would be a claim on a fixed amount of reserves. The key word here is ‘claim’.

Banks would be free to create as many claims as they like on the underlying reserves, so the money supply would expand or shrink with banks’ promises. In a sense the money supply wouldn’t be based on reserves; it would be based on the trustworthiness of private banks.

Money today is also based on trust, albeit trust in one group – central bankers. Instead of a gold standard, you could call it a PhD standard. Only central bankers may issue currency in our system. If that group messes up, the whole system suffers from recession or inflation.

Free banking advocates argue that since trust is the foundation of every money system, it makes more sense to put our faith in the diffuse wisdom of lots of people with ‘skin in the game’ than one all-powerful and politically selected committee.

The goal of monetary policy – of the PhD standard – is to stabilise spending in the economy in such a way that there is low, predictable inflation and low unemployment. A central banker’s job is to nudge interest rates around in such a way as to balance these two objectives.

Under free banking, no group would attempt to stabilise the economy using interest rates, or monetary policy generally. So would the result be an unstable economy, prone to deep prolonged busts and inflationary booms?

History shows that demand for money and goods bounces around quite a lot. During periods of confidence, money flows through the system quickly. But that ‘velocity’ of spending can drop off suddenly if expectations change, leading people to hold more cash as a precaution. When the velocity of money slows, it usually leads to recession. That’s the spending that central bankers try to stabilise using monetary policy.

Free banking advocates including George Selgin, professor of economics at the University of Georgia, say that free banking automatically stabilises spending through the system. When spending slows, the public draws fewer claims on the free banks’ reserves. That leaves banks free to issue more loans and print more currency.

So the slower the velocity of money through the system, the more money banks can safely print to compensate for it. Through the simple mechanism of fractional reserve banking and private money, Selgin claims that free banking would lead to stable spending and a stable macroeconomy.

The Uses and Limits of Free Banking

Clearly, free banking raises more questions than I’ve addressed here. Would the isolated experience of 19th century Scotland really be replicated in a modern economy? Would the extra transaction costs that go with private monies slow the economy’s growth? Would special interests and politics distort a free banking system? How would the man and woman in the street react to the idea that all of their hard-earned savings would be at risk if their bank went bust?

Free banking is banking from first principles, and perhaps its main use is to encourage thinking from first principles. The financial system is complex, perplexing and very real; whereas free banking is simple, elegant and theoretical. But perhaps simplifying and clarifying our thinking might, ultimately, lead to simpler and better banking.

Seán Keyes
Contributing Writer, Money Morning

Publisher’s Note: This is an edited version of an article that originally appeared in MoneyWeek (UK).

From the Archives…

The Problem With the Spanish Bailout
2012-06-15 – Keith Fitz-Gerald

Australian Housing – How to Avoid This Pauper’s Retirement Trap
2012-06-14 – Kris Sayce

Why Warren Buffett is Loading Up on Tungsten
2012-06-13 – Don Miller

China’s Economic Data Statistics: Just Add Salt
2012-06-12 – Dr. Alex Cowie

Why Graphite is One of the Few Places For Savvy Investors to Make Money
2012-06-11 – Dr. Alex Cowie


Free Banking: The Key to a Stable Financial System

EURUSD fails to break above 1.2747 resistance

EURUSD fails to break above 1.2747 resistance. Range trading between 1.2500 and 1.2747 would likely be seen in a couple of days. As long as 1.2500 support holds, the price action from 1.2747 is treated as consolidation of the uptrend from 1.2288, and another rise to 1.2800-1.2900 area is possible. On the downside, a breakdown below 1.2500 will indicate that the uptrend from 1.2288 has completed, then further decline towards 1.2000 could be seen.

eurusd

Daily Forex Forecast

Why You Shouldn’t Be Afraid to Buy Stocks Now, Part II

Article by Investment U

On Friday I made the case that everyone who is interested in achieving great wealth or protecting what they have should invest in stocks.

Not because stocks have generated a certain return over a certain period of time. Not because the outlook for the economy is fabulous. (It’s not.) And not because I have any inkling what the stock market is going to do next. (I don’t … and neither does anyone else.)

You should own stocks because great fortunes are usually the result of business ownership. (And the fortunes generated in real estate often involved massive amounts of leverage that seemed safe only when investors believed real estate appreciation is a one-way street. Not many do anymore.)

The simplest way to gain a piece of a great business is not to found one but to take an ownership stake through the stock market.

It’s not only easy… it’s fair. If I buy shares of Microsoft (Nasdaq: MSFT), for example, my return will be the same as the world’s richest man, Bill Gates. Sure, he may own a few more shares than I do, but our annual percentage gains will be the same.

Every stock market investor needs to be smart about it, however. In particular, you need to follow three proven principles that form the foundation of Investment U and The Oxford Club’s investment strategies:

  1. Asset Allocation
  2. Trailing Stops
  3. Position-Sizing

Let’s take a quick look at each.

Asset Allocation is a phrase that makes the average investor’s eyes glaze over. Yet it is your single most important investment decision. It refers to how you divide your portfolio up among non-correlated assets: stocks, bonds, cash, metals, inflation-adjusted Treasuries and so on. Diversifying a portion of your risk capital outside of equities reduces your portfolio risk and volatility. History shows that businesses (stocks) outperform everything else over the long haul, but few people have the stomach to stay fully invested in prolonged bear markets. Benjamin Graham, Warren Buffett’s mentor, said no one should ever have more than 75% of his portfolio or less than 25% in stocks. It’s a good rule of thumb.

Trailing Stops. Anyone can plunk for a few shares. But the secret of investing is knowing when to get out. Unfortunately, no one rings a bell at the stop. But running a 25% trailing stop behind your individual stock positions allows you to both protect your principal and your profits. We’ve written on this topic frequently. For more information, click here.

Position-Sizing. You should not invest more than 4% of your stock portfolio in any one stock, at least initially. If it climbs, it may eventually become a much bigger portion of your portfolio but that’s ok. After all, you’re going to be running a 25% trailing stop to protect your profits, too. But look at the other side. If a stock goes against you and you take the maximum loss (25%) in the maximum position size (4%), your stock portfolio is going to be worth just one percent less. And if stocks are only, say, 60% of your asset allocation (as The Oxford Club recommends), the maximum loss in your maximum position size in your maximum stock allocation means your portfolio is only down six-tenths of one percent.

Many investors need the high returns that only stock can provide but can’t handle the risk. The solution? Asset allocate properly, run trailing stops and watch your position sizes.

It sure beats the heck out of sitting on the sidelines… and wishing you were earning higher returns.

Good Investing,

Alexander Green

Editor’s Note: This article is the finale in a two-part essay from Alex. To read the first part of his essay and find out why you should look at stocks more as ownership and investment in quality businesses, click here.

Article by Investment U

GURU: Investing With the Best Minds in the Business

By The Sizemore Letter

Last week, I took a look at how the “Investing All-Stars” were positioning themselves for the remainder of 2012.

Then—as now—the Eurozone crisis hung over the capital markets like the proverbial Sword of Damocles.  Given the difficulty of investing under this kind of uncertainty, I thought it would be beneficial to peek over the shoulders of some of the brightest minds in the business.   If anyone could navigate the storm, it would presumably be them.

Lucky for us, there are quite a few good shoulders over which we can peek.  All large institutional investors are required to disclose their security holdings to the SEC by reporting via Form 13-F, and this information is made publicly available.  You can dig through the filings yourself if you enjoy reading financial legalese, but you certainly don’t need to. There is an entire niche industry dedicated to “13-F mining,” and several very good online services that do this legwork for you.  A site I’ve used over the years to check up on some of my favorite investors is GuruFocus, and several new entrants are worth noting as well, including InsiderEdge and  AlphaClone.

For anyone looking for an investment theme to follow, using one of these sites is a great place to start.

For those investors not particularly interested in doing their own research, Global X Funds has created a passive ETF that tracks the trades of major hedge fund managers: the Top Guru Holdings Index ETF ($GURU).

GURU’s portfolio is an equally-weighted mix of the “high conviction” picks of the hedge fund managers that Global X follows.  These would include household names like David Einhorn’s Greenlight Capital, John Paulson’s Paulson & Company, and Seth Klarman’s Baupost Capital, among many, many others.

It’s not hard to understand the appeal of the GURU ETF.  You’re getting some of the top investment ideas of the world’s most talented hedge fund gurus but without the high fees that come with investing in the hedge funds themselves.  Rather than pay the standard 2% of assets and 20% of profits, investors pay a modest 0.75% in expenses.   Not bad.

There are a few shortcomings to note, however:

  1. The ETF only buys listed stocks, and many major guru investments are not publicly traded.  Consider Warren Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway (which is currently not tracked by GURU).  Many of Berkshire’s major positions are in private companies.
  2. GURU’s positions are equally-weighted.  Higher-conviction stocks within the portfolio are given no greater weight, nor are the risk management aspects of position sizing considered.
  3. The ETF only tracks long positions.  If a given “high conviction” pick is really just one half of a pair trade, the ETF managers would have no way of knowing this.
  4. As with all guru-following strategies, there is a time lag.  It is entirely possible that the conditions that lead a guru to buy a stock no longer exist by the time that the GURU ETF picks it up.
  5. As a new ETF, GURU has very little in assets under management and very thin trading volume.  You have to be careful getting in or out of a position in GURU.

For investors building a long-term “buy and forgot” portfolio, GURU is an ETF I would consider, along with the Vanguard Dividend Appreciation ETF ($VIG) and the PowerShares International Dividend Achievers ETF ($PID) (to see my rationale for VIG and PID, see “Sizemore Capital Allocation Change: Dividend Appreciation” and “European Dividend Stocks”) .

But while the ETF has its merits and a long-term holding, I see more value in using it as a fishing pond for investment ideas.  Rather than buy the portfolio as is it, with all of the faults I described above, why not instead cherry pick the best ideas from the ETF?

With that said, let’s take a look at what GURU holds: GURU fund holdings.

There are some familiar names, such as Microsoft ($MSFT) and Apple ($AAPL).  There are also a few names that, for all the enthusiasm of the gurus who own them, haven’t quite panned out.  Tempur-Pedic International ($TPX) is a glaring example; the former Wall Street darling is down by 50% in the past month alone.

Carlos Slim’s America Movil ($AMX) also made the list, which I find particularly interesting.  It would appear that the gurus are investing in the chief competitor of my favorite Latin American telecom play Telefonica ($TEF).

Next quarter, when the ETF is rebalanced, GURU’s holdings will no doubt be substantially different than they are today.  So, if you are following my suggestion to use GURU as a fishing pond, make sure that you review your holdings on at least a quarterly basis.

I’m betting that Tempur-Pedic doesn’t make the cut.

Disclosures: Charles Sizemore contributes articles to GuruFocus and InsiderEdge on occasion.  MSFT, PID, TEF and VIG are currently held by Sizemore Capital clients. This article first appeared on MarketWatch.

Related posts:

Fed holds rate, extends ‘Operation Twist’ until end-2012

By Central Bank News
    The U.S. Federal Reserve maintained the target for its key policy rate, the federal funds rate, at 0-0.25 percent and said it expected to maintain rates at these “exceptionally low levels” at least through late 2014.
    As expected, the Federal Reserve extended its policy of increasing the average maturity of its securities — known as Operation Twist — by purchasing U.S. Treasuries worth $267 billion by the end of the year. Operation Twist was due to expire at the end of June. 
    The Federal Reserve has been extending the maturity of its holdings of U.S. Treasury bonds by purchasing bonds with maturities of six to 30 years, and selling or redeeming the corresponding amount of bonds with maturities of 3 years or less.
    “This continuation of the maturity extension program should put downward pressure on longer-term interest rates and help to make broader financial conditions more accommodative,” the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) said. The FOMC is the Federal Reserve’s main policy making body.

     In a statement released after a two-day meeting of the FOMC, the Federal Reserve said low interest rates would be maintained due to moderate economic growth, including low rates of utilization, and a subdued outlook for inflation over the medium term.
    The Federal Reserve said employment growth in the U.S. economy had slowed in recent months, household spending appeared to be rising at a slower pace than earlier in the year and the housing sector remains depressed, despite some signs of improvement. Inflation had also eased and long-term inflation expectations were stable.
    The FOMC also cut its forecast for U.S. gross domestic product (GDP) growth this year to 1.9-2.4 percent, down from an April projection of 2.4-2.9 percent. Forecasts for 2013 and 2014 were also cut.
    “To support a stronger economic recovery and to help ensure that inflation, over time, is at the rate most consistent with its dual mandate, the Committee expects to maintain a highly accommodative stance for monetary policy,” the Federal Reserve said, adding:
    “The Committee is prepared to take further action as appropriate to promote a stronger economic recovery and sustained improvement in labor market conditions in a context of price stability.”


    Click to read the Federal Reserve’s monetary policy statement.
    Click to read the Federal Reserve’s economic forecast.
    Click to read the Federal Reserve’s Treasury purchasing program


    www.CentralBankNews.info







Carl Icahn Strikes Again at Navistar (NYSE: NAV)

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In focus today: Ichan strikes again at Navistar (NYSE: NAV), pipeline MLPs are pumping cash, and a political SITFA – maybe the most maddening I have ever done.

Carl Icahn Strikes Again

Carl Ichan is at it again, the second time in many months. This time his target is Navistar. Shares moved up 15% on the news of his increased position and the stock bounced off a 52-week low that was the result of previously reported disappointing earnings news.

Ichan boosted his share in the company from 10% to 12%.

Other news on Navistar has Volkswagen (OTC: VLKAY) looking at its truck line as a way of increasing its share of  the U.S. truck market which is dominated by its competitor Daimler (OTC: DDAIF).

Chesapeake (NYSE: CHK) was the most recent company Ichan took a larger stake in and it had very positive effects on its stock. Despite the recent sell off in the markets, CHK ran from $13 and change to around $18 and change after Ichan announced his intention to take a greater role in the activities of the company.

Navistar, which has been struggling for years, may benefit as well from the activist investor. Many analysts have been calling for the company to take a serious look at its direction especially in its engine and truck lines. Ichan may be the guy to make them do it.

Between Volkswagen and Ichan I think we should see some action from this one.

Put Navistar on your bogie board.

“Robust profits, Tax Breaks and a Booming U.S. Energy Sector”

Barron’s described pipeline MLPs as having robust profits, tax breaks and a booming U.S. energy sector. It doesn’t get any more positive than that.

Pipeline MLPs have enjoyed great returns for some time and Credit Suisse analyst John Edwards said in a Barrons article that he sees this continuing with yields in the 6% to 7% range and growth in the high single digits. He sees total return exceeding 15% for the next year.

Edwards likes the large well capitalized MLPs; Including current Oxford Club recommendation Plains All-American Pipeline (NYSE: PAA) and former Oxford Systems Trader pick Enterprise Product Partners (NYSE: EPD).

On the tax side, 80% of an MLPs distributions are tax deferred. The remaining 20% is treated as regular income.

Many MLP owners are able to avoid the deferred portion of the taxes entirely by holding them to their deaths and coming in under the $5 million dollar inheritance threshold.

Kyri Loupis, an MLP manager for Goldman Sachs said in the Barron’s article that he sees distributions rising at 8% a year for the next three years and many MLPs benefiting from exposure to rising crude production in the US.

Loupis likes MarkWest Energy Partners (NYSE: MWE) with a 6.3% yield and its exposure to the fast growing energy production in the Marcellus shale.

Anyway you look at them, pipeline MLPs are growing cash cows in an otherwise dead income market in the U.S.

A total return of 15% per year is rare anywhere right now. Add the tax advantage and it’s almost a giveaway.

SITFA: Huge Oil & Gas Prices Following Election?

This week it goes to all the American people who according to Donald Trump on a CNBC interview are being set up by their president to pay huge gasoline and oil prices after the election this fall.

According to Trump, Obama has cut a deal with the Saudis to ramp up production, what other OPEC member’s are calling over production, to force the price of oil lower before the election.

When I first heard this I was hoping it was just politics, but I can’t find anyone who doesn’t believe the accusation – including a good friend who is an oil analyst.

The Saudi’s oil production is at a 30-year high and in stark contrast to other OPEC members; Argentina and Venezuela are at 20-year lows in their production. Most OPEC members are calling for the Saudis to reduce their output. The Saudi’s have stood firm against all efforts.

The kicker, according to Trump, is the deal with the Saudis allows them to make up for the loss revenues with higher prices after the election. Trump says oil prices will go through the roof.

Lower prices on oil now to help his re-election, higher prices later to pay off the Saudis’.

I wonder if the tax-paying portion of the American people can deduct the coming increase in oil prices Trump is predicting as campaign contributions to re-elect Obama.

If you live long enough…

Article by Investment U

Gold Down Ahead of FOMC Decision, “Policy Gesture” Expected But No Fresh QE, France and Italy Call for Bond Buying with Bailout Fund Money

London Gold Market Report
from Ben Traynor
BullionVault
Wednesday 20 June 2012, 09:00 EDT

SPOT MARKET gold prices dropped back towards $1600 an ounce ahead of Wednesday’s US trading – 1.5% down on last week’s close – while stocks and commodities were broadly flat and US Treasuries fell ahead of the Federal Reserve policy decision due later today.

Silver prices dropped to $28.08 an ounce – 2.2% down on the week so far.

As well as announcing its latest decisions on interest rate and asset purchases, the Fed will also publish policymakers’ economic projections, while Fed chairman Ben Bernanke will give a press conference.

“We think Bernanke will talk up the Fed’s readiness to act if required and there is a chance of a policy gesture – an extension to Operation Twist perhaps,” reckons Nick Trevethan, Singapore-based senior metals strategist at Australian bank ANZ, referring to the Fed’s program aimed at lowering longer-term interest rates.

“But anybody looking for some sort of grand [quantitative easing] scheme risks disappointment,” says Trevethan, adding that gold prices could fall as low as $1530 an ounce “if investors are really disappointed”.

“Extending Operation Twist is the path of least resistance,” agrees Josh Feinman, global chief economist at Deutsche Bank’s asset management arm DB Advisors in New York.

“It would be an extension of something we have in place, so it would be more seamless, and it doesn’t complicate exit strategies as much because it’s not expanding the balance sheet.”

European leaders meantime “will take all necessary measures to safeguard the integrity and stability of the [Euro] area,” according to the official communiqué issued at the end of the G20 meeting Tuesday.

“The adoption of the Fiscal Compact [on government budget reforms],” the communiqué adds, “and its ongoing implementation, together with growth-enhancing policies and structural reform and financial stability measures, are important steps towards greater fiscal and economic integration that lead to sustainable borrowing costs.”

The communiqué was issued hours after Spain auctioned 12-month bills at an average yield of more than 5%. Yield’ on 10-Year debt eased slightly on Wednesday morning, dipping back below 7%.

Europe’s major clearing house LCH.Clearnet  meantime has raised the margin clients must post against positions in Spanish sovereign debt. The margin on bonds with maturities of between 10 and 15 years, for example, will rise from 13.6% to 14.7%. The clearing house made a similar hike for Italian bond positions last November after yields on those bonds rose above 7%.

Eurozone bailout funds the European Financial Stability Facility and the soon-to-be-activated European Stability Mechanism could be used to buy sovereign bonds directly on the open market, according to a proposal made by Italian prime minister Mario Monti at the G20 summit.

“The idea is to stabilize borrowing costs,” said Monti, “especially for countries who are complying with their reform agendas, and this should be sharply distinguished from the idea of a bailout.”

French president Francois Hollande, who described yields of 7% on Spanish bonds as “not acceptable”, expressed support for Monti’s proposal.

“The EFSF already exists,” said Hollande, who also repeated calls for joint debt issuance, a financial transaction tax, and for the European Central Bank to play a greater role in fighting the crisis.

“The ESM will soon exist…let’s use them at the right moment and with the right dose.”
German chancellor Angela Merkel is due to meet with Hollande and Monti, as well as Spanish prime minister Mariano Rajoy, in Rome on Friday.

European leaders “need to deliver something” at next week’s European Union summit, one of Merkel’s aides told newswire Reuters Tuesday.

“We know the expectations for the EU summit are high,” the aide said, “But in reality many countries have still not come to grips with the idea of moving towards greater fiscal integration. It’s going to be very hard to deliver the big announcement.”

Germany’s Constitutional Court meantime has ruled that the German government gave insufficient notice to parliament of plans to set up the ESM, the permanent Eurozone bailout fund due to become active at the start of July. The Bundestag is due to vote on whether to ratify the ESM’s creation next week.

Over in Athens, Greek politicians have agreed on the formation of a government, according to Evangelos Venizelos, the leader of Socialist party Pasok.

Pasok, which came third in Sunday’s election, will form a government with other so-called pro-bailout parties, first-placed New Democracy and the Democratic Left, Venizelos said Wednesday.

Here in the UK, members of the Bank of England’s Monetary Policy Committee “judged that some further economic stimulus was either warranted immediately or would probably become warranted”, according to the minutes of the MPC’s June meeting published Wednesday.

The minutes add that the MPC is “waiting to see how matters evolve” in the Eurozone before undertaking any action.

The number of unemployed in Britain meantime fell nearly 2% to 2.61 million between February and April, according to official data published Wednesday. In May, however, the claimant count – which measures the number of people claiming jobseeker’s allowance – rose by 8100 to 1.6 million.

Gold bullion dealers in India, traditionally the world’s biggest gold market, continued to report quiet demand Wednesday.

“Customers are coming to the jewelry shops,” says Bachhraj Bamalwa, chairman of the All India Gems & Jewellery Trade Federation.

“But now they’ve turned sellers rather than buyers.”

Rupee gold prices in Mumbai set a fresh record on Tuesday, the Wall Street Journal reports. The Rupee has fallen 25% against the Dollar over the last 12 months.

China looks set to overtake India as the world’s biggest gold buyer this year.

Ben Traynor
BullionVault

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Editor of Gold News, the analysis and investment research site from world-leading gold ownership service BullionVault, Ben Traynor was formerly editor of the Fleet Street Letter, the UK’s longest-running investment letter. A Cambridge economics graduate, he is a professional writer and editor with a specialist interest in monetary economics.

(c) BullionVault 2011

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