Stand By for World War D: Controversial Investment Ideas Approaching

By MoneyMorning.com.au

Well, that’s it.

The big day is almost here.

We’ve submitted our PowerPoint presentation.

All we need to do now is summon up the gumption to stand up in front of over 400 people and talk.

Oh, and we actually need to finish writing our speech…otherwise things could get awkward…

Next Monday is the World War D conference here in Melbourne.

Your editor is due to speak before lunch on the first day.

We’ll be honest, we don’t like public speaking. It’s not our forte. Given the choice we’d rather sit behind our desk and slowly form thoughts in our mind to relay to you each morning.

But we get why it’s necessary to do these things. So we’ll do it. And we’ll try not to offend too many people.

Incidentally, if you couldn’t get time off to get to Melbourne, there’s some good news. We’ve hired some pro video guys to record the event. So if you can’t make it but you’d like to tune in to what goes on, check out the full details here. Buy before 1st April and you’ll get a 25% discount off the cover price too.

All the highlights from the best two days of the year

All this means there will be a format change to Money Morning next week.

In the interests of giving you the low down on each and every speaker who presents next week, we’re handing the reigns of Money Morning over to roving reporters Shae Smith and Callum Denness.

They’ll report live from the conference floor at the Grand Hyatt detailing the highlights (and hopefully not many lowlights) from each presentation.

Obviously, with so many world-class speakers on show for two days next week we couldn’t do their presentations justice if we tried to cram everything into Monday and Tuesday.

If you want to hear and see the biggest and best contrarian investment conference this year, then this is it. We expect cheers, gasps, and even a few boos.

So we’ll share the highlights with you throughout the week.

And of course, as soon as the conference wraps up the video production crew will begin cutting the footage in order to get the DVD of the event out as soon as possible. Remember that you can secure a 25% discount here right now .

Ranting, raving…and practical advice

So, what do we plan on banging on about?

Well, part of the performance will include stressing some of the topics we’ve covered in Money Morning during the past few months.

That is, the idea that irrelevant events have distracted markets and investors. We’ll explain that the distractions are bad enough, especially when they turn out to be far less serious than initially claimed.

But we’ll also explain that that isn’t the half of it.

What makes things worse is the fact that these distractions have scared investors from buying stocks when they were trading at dirt-cheap valuations. Even today, although we can’t claim stocks are super cheap, it’s fair to say that if company earnings can grow then current valuations are justified.

After that, then we’ll attack the usual suspects. We won’t reveal whom yet. You’ll find that out next week when Shae and Callum report. And if you pre-order the video of the event you’ll be able to watch your editor in full-bore attack mode.

Finally, we’ll finish off with the practical advice. After all, it’s OK to listen to someone rant and rave, but it’s much better if they rant and rave while giving you useful information on how to make or save money.

That’s what we plan to do.

Whether we do that successfully or not, you’ll have to wait to see.

If you can’t be there, be there online

In the meantime, what will it mean for our analysis of the markets each day?

Remember to check out our Google+ page throughout the day on Monday and Tuesday. Whenever we’re not on stage or interviewing some of the other speakers, we’ll post comments on the action to Google+.

If you haven’t joined Google+ we recommend it. It’s the only social networking service we personally use. So make sure to check it out.

We’ll also reveal the single best, most useful, and practical piece of investment advice in the Premium Notes section for Money Morning Premium subscribers.

Look out for a special invitation to become a Premium subscriber in your inbox today. (Note: not every Money Morning subscriber will receive this invitation. If you don’t receive an invitation this time, don’t feel left out, your turn will come. Just keep your eyes peeled in the coming weeks.)

So, that’s it. Normal Money Morning service will resume after next week.

We hope you’ll enjoy next week’s editions of Money Morning. It will be different, but just as good.

See you on Monday.

Cheers,
Kris+

PS : Remember to pre-order your World War D conference DVD for a 25% discount. Go here to submit your details…

From the Port Phillip Publishing Library

Special Report: ASX: 15,000

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By MoneyMorning.com.au

Why Regulation from the Central Banks Never Works

By MoneyMorning.com.au

Like army generals, the senior financial regulators are always fighting the last war. Here’s how the game works:

The regulator recruits some low-ranking bod from London to tell them what they need to know about the dastardly banks’ various nefarious schemes…

The big London institutions recruit high-ranking bods from the regulator…

Then the new recruits tell the banks exactly what they can and can’t get away with. And exactly how they should push the envelope.

It’s a ‘revolving door’ of staff succession between the central banks and the finance industry. It means the regulator is indeed, always preparing for the last battle. The bigger chequebook offered by the banks ensures they are always one-step ahead of the shoeshine.

I was catching up with an old mate the other week and together we lamented the regulatory environment (yes, these are the sorts of conversations old bores like us have for fun!)…

Well, Bengt, surely the regulator needs to be beefed up. They need to spend bank-level salaries and get hold of the top talent to keep this industry in check!

No, no, no…‘ says I. ‘What we need is anarchy…

Regulation just doesn’t work

In the run-up to the 2007/08 crisis, regulation failed. It’s practically bound to. When it comes to banking, we’re dealing with big-money power brokers.

There’s also the nature of global capital markets. If you don’t like the regulation in one country, then shift operations to another. That’s a powerful tool oft used by the banks. London, in particular, has benefited from open financial markets. Successive governments have kept EU regulation at bay, shielding our banks from legislation emerging from Brussels.

The point is it’s extremely difficult to regulate effectively. Either the banks won’t have it, or they’ll continually adapt to new legislation.

But the worst of it all is the uncanny ability of the regulators to score own goals.

Take the highly topical annuities furore here in Britain. Regulation has long-since been established to ensure pensioners (or the pension managers) don’t whittle away individuals’ savings as they go into retirement. The regulators decreed that most retirees on a private pension will have to buy an annuity (an income for life policy).

An IFA mate was just telling me how just about everyone she’s put into annuities over the last year has opted for a non-inflation linked policy. Nobody wants to buy an inflation-linked policy paying a pitiful £3,000 a year, for every £100,000 invested. Instead, they buy fixed annuities paying something like £6,000 on £100,000 invested.

These retirees could be alive for 30 years or more. Given the central bank’s monetary experimentations, these annuities could become all but worthless.

This is the law of unintended consequences…and it has an uncanny way of popping its head round the regulators door. So I was encouraged to see MP George Osborne breaking out of this way of thinking in his budget last week.

The government’s radical move

In the light of Osborne’s budget announcement to vastly scale back annuities, the insurance industry is up in arms. But with the government’s swift action here, it seems the industry didn’t have time to dispatch its lieutenants.

The industry is crying ‘foul!’ They say retirement funds will be whittled away. ‘Regulation is there for a reason you know!’

But their argument hides the truth. And that is, regulation is used by the big boys to protect their own interests and their carefully groomed markets. It adds reams of complexity to finance, maintains the status quo and thwarts competition.

The current system of regulation strips individuals of responsibility and hives it off to an industry highly undeserving of our trust. It all too often allows the industry free rein to siphon off vast sums of our money. A) Because somebody has to pay for all the compliance staff in the first place. And B) because the regulation hinders competition in the savings market.

Explanation, not regulation

I like the idea of simplifying finance. Simplifying pensions. Making it easy for people to understand and to look after their own finances by demystifying the industry. And yes, that means less complicated regulation. Explanation, not regulation.

The NHS has a very useful online flow-chart that helps individuals identify and help treat symptoms. The government could set a similar flow-chart for the health of an individual’s finances.

Let the investing public work it out for themselves. In so doing, I suspect many will be much more realistic about their retirement savings policy too.

But, I hear you cry, ‘Who’s going to look after individuals and make sure they don’t just get ripped off?’

Now, while that’s a concern, I don’t think it’ll be as considerable as you may think. Given today’s vast information network, it wouldn’t be too difficult to weed out the industry’s nasties. If eBay can set up a decent enough system to identify shamsters, then why can’t a government website do the same?

And anyway, it’s not as if there aren’t enough investment scams going on even in today’s regulated markets. I dare say many individuals are conned into land banking schemes, diamond investment fraud and dodgy wine investments because they think that the regulators are policing the whole system. Individuals put too much faith in the system.

Better to be honest about it. Osborne needs to go further. He needs to further demystify the financial system and let individuals get on with their own investments. That would open up the financial markets to more simple investment products that investors understand. Because I firmly believe that with a little help, investing is something anyone can manage on their own. While unregulated, the system would be an awful lot safer than what goes on behind the closed doors of today’s highly regulated investment banks!

Your money. Your look out!

Bengt Saelensminde,
Contributing Editor, Money Morning

Ed note: The above article was originally published in MoneyWeek.

From the Archives…

Hashing Out the Iron Ore Price
22-03-14 – Shae Smith

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By MoneyMorning.com.au

USDJPY is now in downtrend from 102.68

USDJPY is now in downtrend from 102.68. Deeper decline to test 101.20 support would likely be seen, a breakdown below this level will confirm that the longer term downtrend from 103.76 has resumed, then the following downward movement could bring price to 98.00 zone. Resistance is at 102.68, only break above this level will indicate that lengthier sideways movement in a range between 101.20 and 103.76 is underway, then further rise to 103.50 area could be seen.

usdjpy

Provided by ForexCycle.com

The Importance of Risk Management In Forex Trading

Forex Trading

There are many factors to consider before starting Forex Trading. One would need to select which Forex broker to use. One would also need to select which Forex trading platform they will use. One of the most important things that a Forex trader needs to know is understanding risk management. What exactly does this mean? In the simplest terms it really refers to how much the Forex trader is willing to lose on a particular trade. Risk management in Forex trading can be very subjective. Forex traders come from a variety of backgrounds and what they’re willing to risk may vary greatly.

The Forex trader needs to define how much exposure they’re willing to take on each trade at a particular moment. The Forex trader also needs to implement stop orders in order to limit their losses for each particular trade. One of the biggest challenges of implementing a risk management system is the factor of human emotion. Many Forex traders convince themselves that their decision is right and they decide not to implement the necessary risk management parameters. The most successful of Forex traders are those that are quick to realize and act on their decision that their original decision was incorrect.

Fortunately there are now tools that help us implement a risk management system in Forex trading. The software tools help us take the emotion out of trading. The Forex trader can calculate and implement his parameters so that he will limit his losses. These particular software tools can make the difference between a successful Forex trader.

 

To learn more please visit wwww.clmforex.com

Trading Forex and Derivatives carries a high level of risk, including the risk of losing substantially more than your initial investment. Also, you do not own or have any rights to the underlying assets. The effect of leverage is that both gains and losses are magnified. You should only trade if you can afford to carry these risks.

Trading Derivatives may not be suitable for all investors, so please ensure that you fully understand the risks involved, and seek independent advice if necessary. A Financial Services Guide (FSG) and Product Disclosure Statements (PDS) for these products are available from Core Liquidity Markets Pty Ltd to download at this website or here, and hard copies can be obtained by contacting the offices at the number above.

Please also note that your call may be recorded for training and monitoring purposes. Any advice provided to you on this website or by our representatives is general advice only, and does not take into account your objectives, financial situation or needs. You should therefore consider the appropriateness of our advice before making any decision about using our services. You should also consider our PDSs before making any decision about using our products or services.

Note that the information on this site is not directed at residents in any country or jurisdiction where such distribution or use would be contrary to local law or regulation.

Disclaimer: Core Liquidity Markets refers to Core Liquidity Markets Pty Ltd. Core Liquidity Markets is an Australian firm registered with ASIC, ACN 164 994 049. Core Liquidity Markets is a Corporate Authorised Representative Number 443832 of GO Markets Pty Ltd AFSL 254963 the Authorizing Licensee and Principal.

 

 

 

Why Ukraine’s Next President Doesn’t Matter

By OilPrice.com

Having ridden roughshod over Ukraine, Russia’s annexation of the Crimea is now over and a new chapter in Ukrainian politics is about to begin—but it won’t be much different than the last chapter, with the same old faces surfacing for May presidential elections.

In the aftermath of the Maidan protests that overthrew president Viktor Yanukovych in February and Russia’s retaliatory annexation of the Crimea in March, Ukraine has moved presidential elections forward a year to 25 May.

As of early Wednesday, the top four candidates for the presidency were independent businessman Petro Poroshenko, professional boxer and UDAR party leader Vitali Klitschko, banker and former ruling party figure Serhiy Tihipko, and controversial former prime minister Yulia Tymoshenko, who was recently released from prison to join the Maidan protests.

According to a survey conducted between 14 and 19 March, Poroshenko was polling with a significant lead of 24.9%, leaving Klitschko and Tymoshenko battling it out for second place with 8.9% and 8.2%, respectively, and Tihipko trailing slightly with 7.3%.

What the polls indicate is that Poroshenko is likely to make it to a second round of elections, which are expected to take place sometime around late June, while he would be running against Klitschko, Tymoshenko or Tihipko, who are each polling more or less equally.

But the situation is dynamic. Late on Wednesday, Oilprice.com sources in Kiev close to former energy and vice-prime minister Yury Boyko said he had officially placed himself in the running for president, as an independent candidate.

Regardless of who wins the presidential vote, the Maidan will be disappointed. The protest movement wasn’t just complaining about the Yanukovych government—it was complaining about over two decades of pervasive corruption, and now we are seeing those same faces again.

All of the top five candidates carry with them baggage from previous failed governments, but none more than Tymoshenko.

While Poroshenko is a successful businessperson, Klitschko a successful athlete and Tihipko a successful banker, Tymoshenko is largely perceived as a failed politician.

Of the four, Poroshenko and Klitschko have the cleanest records, and the least amount of negative political baggage.

“Tymoshenko is not a trusted political figure, and there have been quite a few polls stating such,” Ukraine energy expert Robert Bensh told Oilprice.com.

Tymoshenko spent three years in jail on what her supporters say were politically motivated charges of abuse of power before being freed last month; but her return to the political fray is a highly controversial one.

“She polls right in with current and/or former members of government. And the reason is that the rumors about her wealth and how she acquired her wealth are still quite prevalent and she is still very much viewed as a member of the failed government of Viktor Yushchenko. Indirectly, and with some success, people have been tying her to one of the reasons we’re having so many problems today. The Orange Revolution was a failure. We have the gas deal with Russia which she signed with Yury Prodan, the current acting energy minister,” said Bensh, who has been leading oil and gas companies in Ukraine for nearly a decade and a half.

Tymoshenko’s time has passed—a sentiment Bensh said was made clear when she was released from prison and joined the Maidan protests. “The reception she received was quite cool. It was a polite reception; not the roaring of the crowd that she was used to.”

At the same time, Bensh says, while Tihipko’s chances are more remote because of his ties to the former ruling Party of Regions, he may surprise us because he is the only one who has carved out a singular voice among the four.

Poroshenko, Klitschko and Tymoshenko are all going after the same voters, while Tihipko has to appeal to the industrial regions and to the Russian-speaking population with a pro-industry and pro-business platform.

“The other three candidates will come out with muddled messages,” Bensh said. “I don’t think they know what to be. Are they pro-Ukraine, pro-EU? Are they anti-Russian while at the same time being careful about the Russian message? For a political consultant, Tihipko and Boyko are certainly the most interesting candidates. Tihipko is a successful former national bank president, and Boyko an energy expert whose politics are less polarizing. Both would recognize the country’s development potential.”

With Boyko entering the fray, Tihipko’s chances are reduced because they will be competing for the same votes.

But for Boyko, too, it will be challenging to overcome the stigma of ties to the former government. “He has to show how and why he should be trusted,” Bensh said.

Bensh cautions against attributing too much significance to Ukraine’s presidential elections.

In response to the Yanukovych government and the Maidan protests, Ukraine has returned to its 2004 Constitution, which means that power will rest with the prime minister and the parliament. A new president will choose a prime minister, which must then be approved by the parliament. According to Bensh, the general belief is that once a new president takes office in July, there will be a call for parliamentary elections later in the fall, though nothing has yet been mandated.

“At the end of the day, the best person for Ukraine is a 35-year-old who isn’t running for president—who isn’t part of the system yet and hasn’t been involved in over 20 years of poor political leadership and corruption. We’re a generation away—hopefully—from a true leader who can turn Ukraine into a strong, independent country that sits between Russia and Europe,” Bensh said.

From a business standpoint, the economic and political situation will not show signs of stability until next year. At the same time, the intuitive investor may see opportunity ripening.

“For the contrarians out there, this is the time you should start jumping in. The situation is stabilizing, the currency risk is beginning to minimize. From an economic standpoint if you’re going to get into Ukraine and do something inexpensively, now is the time to come in. You’ve got nine months before it stabilizes, and at that point, the whole world is showing up,” Bensh said.

Source: http://oilprice.com/Energy/Energy-General/Why-Ukraines-Next-President-Doesnt-Matter.html

By. James Stafford of Oilprice.com

 

 

 

 

EUR/USD falls below 1.3748, signaling more losses ahead

Despite mixed US reports, with Unemployment Claims of 311K beating the forecast 326K and Pending Home Sales falling 0.8% to two year lows, the USD gained more traction against the EUR today. The negative deposit rates and the possible quantitative easing signals from the ECB have put pressure on market sentiment, which is now weighing towards negative, favoring more losses for the pair.

Technical Analysis

EUR/USD 4H

Last week it was unclear whether the EUR/USD sell-off was a one shot dip in search for a decent support before the uptrend would continue, or if it was the beginning of a larger trend correction. With help of 20-20 hindsight, we can see how the first rally after the sell-off was actually a sign of weakness itself, with price pulling back after the 1.3875 pivot zone near the 61.8% fibonacci retracement level was reached. This lower high hinted that the uptrend was in trouble, yet the perfect double low that ultimately formed at 1.3748 added to the general confusion regarding the overall direction.

EUR/USD Daily

Today EUR/USD flirted once again with this support, this time closing below the 200 simple moving average on the 4H timeframe, yet another bearish signal. With the support now broken, EUR/USD is going to search for a lower low. Eyes are now set towards 1.3630 area, a strong fibonacci confluence coupled and a previous pivot zone. The secondary confluence is located between 1.3535-1.3550.

EUR/USD will technically remain bearish even if rallies test 1.3800-1.3830 area once again, as the lower high – lower low trend configuration will remain unchanged.

*********
Prepared by Alexandru Z., Chief Currency Strategist at Capital Trust Markets

 

 

 

 

Czech holds rate, confirms will intervene to cap FX rate

By CentralBankNews.info
    The Czech Republic’s central bank maintained its benchmark two-week repo rate at 0.05 percent and confirmed its continued commitment to intervene on foreign exchange markets to keep the koruna’s rate against the euro close to 27.
    The Czech National Bank (CNB) started using the exchange rate as an additional tool to ease monetary conditions and fight deflation in November, 12 months after it cut the repo rate to the current level. It has committed itself to defend the cap on the koruna until at least 2015.
    “The CNB Bank Board repeated that it regards the commitment as one-side,” the bank said about its intervention on foreign exchange markets to prevent excessive appreciation of the koruna below 27 to the euro. On the weaker side of the 27 level, the CNB is allowing the exchange rate to float freely.
    The koruna was quoted at 27.4 to the euro today, slightly down from 27.3 end-2013.
     Inflation in the Czech Republic was steady at 0.2 percent in February and January, sharply down from December’s 1.4 percent, but mainly due to a bigger than expected drop in regulated prices.
    The CNB targets inflation of 2.0 percent, plus/minus one percentage point.

    http://ift.tt/1iP0FNb

 

Covered Calls

By Dennis Miller, millersmoney.com

The strategy I’m writing about today is one of my favorite, guaranteed moneymakers. These are trades we can all easily make, requiring no capital outlay and guaranteed to make a profit or you don’t make them. What’s the catch? We might occasionally find ourselves lamenting how much more money we might have made.

Experienced investors have likely figured out that I’m talking about a stock option called a “covered call.” Buying options is for speculators, and that’s not what I’m talking about today. I want to show you the one and only option trade that meets my stringent criteria for comfort.

Covered calls:

  • Are easily understood;
  • Are easy to implement;
  • Require no market timing to make your predetermined profit; and
  • Require minimal time for investors to manage.

In addition, you can calculate your profit clearly at the time of the trade (if there’s no hefty gain, you pass on it); the risks are financially and emotionally manageable; and the upside potential is excellent with covered calls. Let’s begin with the boilerplate stuff first before we discuss strategy.

There’s an options market that allows people to buy and sell options on stocks. Speculators have made millions of dollars trading options without owning a single share of stock. That’s the wrong place to be with your retirement nest egg. I’m going to show you how an average investor with an online brokerage account can supplement his income in a safe, easy, responsible, and conservative manner.

Let’s start with a basic premise: money is consistently made on the sell side of the transaction. Selling one type of option is the only strategy that will meet our stringent criteria.

Before we proceed, here’s a need-to-know glossary for covered calls:

Stock option. An option is a right that can be bought and sold. There are markets for trading options in an orderly manner. Two transactions may occur between the buyer and seller. The first is the transaction when the right (option) is sold. The second transaction is “optional” and at the discretion of the buyer. If the buyer exercises his right (option), the seller is required to complete an agreed-upon stock transaction. Today we’re focusing on covered call options.

Covered Calls. When you sell a covered call, the buyer purchases the right to buy a certain number of shares of stock which you own, at an agreed upon (strike) price, at any time before the option expires (known as the expiration date). The option buyer is not obligated to buy your stock; he has the right to do so. You’re obligated to sell the stock if the buyer exercises the option. The term for this is your stock gets “called away.” Regardless, you keep the money you were paid when you sold your option.

There are four elements to an option transaction:

  1. the price of the option in the market (what you can buy or sell it for);
  2. the number of contracts (each contract is 100 shares);
  3. the price of the underlying stock (referred to as strike price); and
  4. the expiration date.

Option price. This is the price the option is bought or sold for. This changes as the price of the underlying stock moves in the market and the time frame moves closer to the expiration date. Readers will see that there are two prices: “bid” and “asked,” just like stocks. When you sell an option, this completes the first part of the transaction. The money changes hands and is yours to keep, regardless of what happens later. Cha-ching!

Strike price. This part of the transaction is agreed upon when the option is bought/sold. Let’s assume the buyer purchased a call (a right to your stock) at a strike price of $55/share. Should the buyer choose to exercise his option, the buyer pays you $55/share, and you (through your broker) deliver the stock, regardless of the current market price of the stock.

Expiration date. Options generally expire on the third Friday of every month. When looking at the options trading platform on any major stock, you’ll find options available for several months in advance. You’ll notice that the longer the remaining time, the higher the price of the option.

At the time the stock option is bought/sold, all of the elements above are agreed upon. The buyer has until the expiration date to exercise his option. The numbers of shares and selling price have already been determined. If your stock is called away, you’ll see the cash come in to your brokerage account, and the shares will automatically be delivered to the buyer.

Never sell a call option without owning the underlying stock; it’s much too risky for your retirement nest egg.

Option contract. An option contract is for 100 shares of the underlying stock. Options are sold in contracts, and the prices are quoted per share. For example, if you see an option price of $1.15, the contract will cost $115 ($1.15 x 100 shares). If a buyer/seller wants to have an option on 500 shares, he buys five contracts.

There are two types of options: puts and calls. We’re going to discuss the only option strategy that meets our stringent, conservative criteria: selling a covered call.

Why would an investor buy a call option? Buyers of call options are generally speculators who believe that a stock will appreciate above the strike price before the option expires. If they guess right, they can make a lot of money.

The vast majority of call options expire worthless. The rules are simple. Don’t sell an option unless you own the underlying stock. (This is referred to as a “naked call”.) Don’t buy options—period!

A Savvy Strategy

We’ll use a fictional company – ABC Products – for an example. Say we bought the stock in October 2012 for $40; the market price one year later (in November 2013) was $55/share. Why would we want to sell a covered call?

In November, ABC was $55/share. We’ll say its current dividend is $0.55/share. The March call option at a strike price of $57 is selling for $1.10/share—twice as much as the current dividend.

Assume that on December 20, you either called your broker or went online and brought up ABC in your trading platform. You would have seen the current bid and asked prices. Assume it sold for $1.10/share.

Now, one of four things could have happened:

  1. The stock didn’t go over the $57 strike price, so the stock was not called away. In approximately 90 days, you’d have received $0.55/share in dividends, plus $1.10 for the option, for a total of $1.65. You just added more than double the dividend to your yield without spending a penny more of your investment capital. What do we do when the option expires? Look for another juicy opportunity for the June options and do it again!
  2. Let’s take the worst-case scenario: the market tanked. You had a 20% trailing stop in place. You got stopped out at $44—$11/share lower than the November price. But wait a minute, what about the covered call? The value of the option would also have dropped and sold for mere pennies. If you got stopped out of the stock, you could have bought back the option at the same time. For the sake of illustration, say you bought it back for $0.04. You netted $1.06/share profit. Instead of losing $11/share, your loss became $9.94. If you didn’t buy back your option, you’d have had huge risk exposure should the stock jump back up. It isn’t worth the risk, so you’d spend the few pennies it takes to close out your position.
  3. You wanted to exit your position before the expiration date. If the stock rises above the strike price of the option, generally the price of the option will move right along with it. If the stock moved to $59/share, you would “buy to close.” The market price should be close to $2/share; however, that would be offset by the fact that you sold your stock for $59.00 share.If the stock remained stagnant or started to drop and you wanted to exit your position, the market price of the option would decline more rapidly. You’d likely buy back your option at a profit.
  4. The most difficult situation emotionally is when the stock rises well above the strike price and gets called. Let’s assume that in March, ABC has appreciated to $59/share. Your option is called at $57 (the strike price). You make a profit of $2/share from the time you sold the option, plus the $1.10/share for the option and the $0.55 dividend, for a total of $3.65/share. For the 90-day time frame, you earned 6.3% on your money ($55/share), or 24.9% on an annualized basis, net of brokerage commission. Yet we’ll lament the fact that you could have made more.

In each case, you haven’t invested any more capital. You make 100% profit on the call in two cases. The worst case is you generally break even on the options should you want to exit early. In the vast majority of cases, selling covered calls is straight profit on top of your dividends.

Here are some guidelines:

  • Sell covered calls for stocks you own and would gladly keep.
  • Sell covered calls to expire after the dividends are paid.
  • Sell covered calls at a strike price above the current market price of the stock, referred to as “out of the money.”
  • Don’t lament the times your stock gets called. You took a nice profit, and there are plenty more opportunities out there.
  • Use stocks that are heavily traded, as they are more liquid.
  • To calculate gains for any stock and option price combination, please use our option calculator, which you can download here.

Selling selected covered calls is a great way to turbocharge yield without any additional investment. At the same time, it will mitigate a bit of risk. If you have a 20% trailing stop in place and the stock gets stopped out, your 20% will be offset by the profit you made on the option sale. While most investors are starved for yield, you can find yield in the safest and easiest manner possible.

Each month, we look at the Miller’s Money Forever portfolio and recommend and track covered calls on some of our positions. If you’re not a current subscriber, I highly recommend taking advantage of our 90-day, no-risk offer. Sign up at the current promotional rate of $99/year, and download my book and all of our special reports—really take your time and look us over. If within the first 90 days you feel we’re not for you, feel free to cancel and receive a 100% refund, no questions asked. You can still keep the material as our thank-you for taking a look. Click here to subscribe risk-free today.

 

The article Covered Calls was originally published at millersmoney.com.

South Africa holds rate, but remains in tightening cycle

By CentralBankNews.info
    South Africa’s central bank maintained its benchmark repurchase rate at 5.5 percent, as expected, but said it remains in a tightening cycle and the pace of future tightening will depend on inflation, the economy and global developments.

     But the South African Reserve Bank (SARB) added that even if the policy rate is below what can be considered normal and is likely to rise in the medium term, this does not mean that there has to be a change in stance at every meeting and the size of the changes may not always be of the same magnitude.
    Gill Marcus, SARB governor, said monetary policy is still facing the dilemma of a subdued economic outlook amid persistent upside risks to inflation despite the recent appreciation of the rand, which remains vulnerable to shifts in global risk sentiment and adverse domestic developments.
    While SARB maintained its forecast for 2014 headline inflation to average 6.3 percent, with 6.6 percent in the fourth quarter, the forecast for average 2015 inflation was cut to 5.8 percent from a previous 6.0 percent, with inflation expected to average 5.6 percent in the final quarter of 2015 from 5.9 percent previously.
    The slight improvement in the inflation outlook is mainly due to the lagged effect of January’s 50 basis point rate increase and inflation is still expected to breach the SARB’s upper end of its target range in the second quarter of this year before returning to the bank’s 3.0 – 6.0 percent range in the second quarter of 2015 when it is expected to measure 5.9 percent.


    South Africa’s headline inflation rose to 5.9 percent in February from January’s 5.8 percent, but was down from a 2013-high of 6.4 percent in August.

     The outlook for core inflation has also improved, Marcus said, and expected to average 5.6 percent in both 2014 and 2015, compared with the previous forecast of 5.8 percent and 5.9 percent, respectively.
    “Notwithstanding this improvement, the upward pressures continue to be seen to be coming from the lagged effects of the exchange rate depreciation,” Marcus said, adding that the inflation risks remain to the upside as the exchange rate can overshoot for extended periods due to the current uncertain global environment and the current low level of inflation pass-through may not persist.
    The rand’s exchange rate has been volatile, but appreciated by about 2.4 percent against the U.S. dollar since the previous meeting of the SARB’s monetary policy committee, supported by improving risk sentiment towards emerging markets.
    The rand fell 19 percent against the U.S. dollar in 2013 as the Fed prepared to reduce its asset purchases and continued to fall until Jan. 29 this year, hitting 11.30 to the dollar. Since then it has appreciated and rose to 10.61 to the dollar after the SARB’s decision.
     South Africa’s current account narrowed sharply to 5.1 percent of Gross Domestic Product in the fourth quarter from 6.8 percent in the third quarter for a 2013 deficit of 5.8 percent.
    “Although we expect the current account to respond to the depreciated exchange rate, this adjustment is likely to be gradual and some widening of the trade deficit is expected in the first quarter of 2014,” Marcus said, with the protracted strike in the platinum sector and relatively inelastic import demand constraining the improvement.
    Despite the continued tapering of asset purchases by the U.S. Federal Reserve, Marcus said the domestic yield curve had flattened – as the long end shifted downwards – and there was a net inflow to South Africa’s equity markets in February and March of 11.6 billion rand after net sales of 25.1 billion between November and January.
    Non-residents remained sellers of South African bonds but at a slower pace.
    But the outlook for South Africa’s economy remain subdued, with growth expected to remain below potential of 3.0-3.5 percent in 2014. SARB’s forecast for economic growth has been trimmed to 2.6 percent in 2014 from 2.8 percent and the 2015 forecast revised down to 3.1 percent from 3.3 percent previously.
    “The risks to this forecast are seen to be on the downside, given the protracted strike in the platinum sector and electricity supply constraints,” Marcus said.

    South Africa’s GDP rebounded in the fourth quarter of 2013 with annual growth rising to 2.0 percent from 1.7 percent in the third quarter when there was a strike-induced contraction in the manufacturing sector.

    http://ift.tt/1iP0FNb

Outside the Box: Minsky’s Financial Instability Hypothesis

By John Mauldin

Looking back, I see that I have mentioned the name Hyman Minsky in no fewer than ten Thoughts from the Frontline letters in just the past two years; and his name has popped up in all four letters so far this month, most notably on March 1, when we brought back one of my most popular pieces, “Black Swans and Endogenous Uncertainty” (the “sandpile” letter) and last week, when the letter was titled “China’s Minksy Moment?”

I wasn’t consciously aware of how often I had trotted Minsky out as I sat (somewhat unstably, I have to admit) atop a headstrong horse in the foothills of the Argentine Andes the other day; but my precarious situation did somehow get me thinking of Minsky’s Financial Instability Hypothesis, and it occurred to me that both you and I might learn something by going right back to its source, which turns out to be a rather unprepossessing five-page paper Dr. Minsky published at Bard College in 1992.

Minsky’s work was roundly ignored by the economics profession and policy makers alike … until all hell broke loose in the financial industry and then the global economy in 2008. At the time (in Dec. 2007), I described Minsky’s thesis like this:

[E]conomist Dr. Hyman Minsky points out that stability leads to instability. The more comfortable we get with a given condition or trend, the longer it will persist and then when the trend fails, the more dramatic the correction. The problem with long-term macroeconomic stability is that it tends to produce unstable financial arrangements. If we believe that tomorrow and next year will be the same as last week and last year, we are more willing to add debt or postpone savings in favor of current consumption. Thus, says Minsky, the longer the period of stability, the higher the potential risk for even greater instability when market participants must change their behavior.

The term Minsky moment was coined in 1998 by my good friend Paul McCulley (who, by the way, will once again entertain and enlighten us at the upcoming Strategic Investment Conference, May 13-16). He was characterizing the Russian default and ensuing Long Term Capital Management debacle, but he got to reprise the term (and how!) in ’08. And then everybody jumped on the “Minsky moment” bandwagon.

So today, let’s harken to the words of the man himself, in his “Financial Instability Hypothesis” paper from 1992.

I write tonight from my condo in La Estancia de Cafayate. Last Saturday we spent seven hours trekking the Andes highlands to spend a few days with my friend Bill Bonner (of Daily Reckoning fame). He and his wife Elizabeth are gracious hosts. His South American home is in the middle of 500,000 acres of some extraordinarily godforsaken land in the backside of the middle of nowhere. It comes complete with real-life gauchos, who have lived on the property for dozens of generations, and a herd of some 1000 sand-fed cattle. (In the dry season there is not much else for them to eat.) The area was settled from Peru in the 1500s. It is as remote as any place I’ve ever been, but it also shines with some of the most majestic beauty this writer has ever seen. If Montana is Big Sky Country, then this part of the world has to be called Muy Grande Cielo Campo. The valleys and surrounding mountains are larger and grander than any I have seen in my far-flung travels.

What passes for a road to Bill’s estancia is sometimes a dry, sandy riverbed but often just a track cut and mended by road graders from time to time through very rocky terrain and and over and through mountain passes.

But it was worth all the effort. I treasure the moments I get with Bill (and this time I was accompanied by David Galland, Olivier Garret, and Frank Trotter). I never know quite what to expect when I come to one of Bill’s “homes,” which are really just very large and very time-consuming projects, but he and Elizabeth seem to love it. As we arrived, one of the gauchos had discovered a few dead calves (otherwise healthy a few days before), and there was concern there might be a contagious disease, so they spent the next few days gathering what they could find of the herd, which was of course scattered all over heck and gone. Getting them into the pen and vaccinating them – and since they had them there, branding and gelding them as appropriate – was all in a very long day’s work. It had been many decades since I was anywhere close to that sort of work.

Some of you prone to wincing might want to avoid the following sentences. They had one young bull calf pushed into a chute where he was immobilized, and the head gaucho dropped into the chute behind him. The calf thereupon met his own Minsky moment. The gaucho, swear to God, pulled out a Swiss Army knife and proceeded to geld the unfortunate creature. It was not the clean, swift procedure I remember as a kid. I had no idea they made Swiss Army knives with that attachment. It seems to be missing in mine. The next time I go to Bill’s estancia, I am going to bring the gaucho a set of purpose-built clippers. I may even have them plated in stainless steel. It’s what you get for the man who has everything.

Our conversation at 10,000 feet in the Andes ranged far and wide but kept coming back to the intersection of economics, politics, and philosophy. And being basically off the grid for a couple days, we had plenty of time in the evening for conversation and even a little singing. Bill has written yet another book and writes daily for his own blog. After 30 years, we always have a lot to talk about. I live for days like this.

It is time to hit the send button, as there is a large group waiting at a local café for a reception. It is a beautiful night with perfect weather. It’s hard to think of place better suited for working vacation. Until this weekend…

Your glad he makes his living riding a computer analyst,

John Mauldin, Editor
Outside the Box
[email protected]

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The Financial Instability Hypothesis

By Hyman P. Minsky
The Jerome Levy Economics Institute of Bard College
May 1992

The financial instability hypothesis has both empirical and theoretical aspects. The readily observed empirical aspect is that, from time to time, capitalist economies exhibit inflations and debt deflations which seem to have the potential to spin out ofcontrol. In such processes the economic system’s reactions to a movement of the economy amplify the movement – inflation feeds upon inflation and debt-deflation feeds upon debt-deflation. Government interventions aimed to contain the deterioration seem to have been inept in some of the historical crises.
These historical episodes are evidence supporting the view that the economy does not always conform to the classic precepts of Smith and Walras: they implied that the economy can best be understood by assuming that it is constantly an equilibrium seeking and sustaining system.

The classic description of a debt deflation was offered by Irving Fisher (1933) and that of a self-sustaining disequilibrating processes by Charles Kindleberger (1978). Martin Wolfson (1986) not only presents a compilation of data on the emergence of financial relations conducive to financial instability, but also examines various financial crisis theories of business cycles.

As economic theory, the financial instability hypothesis is an interpretation of the substance of Keynes’s “General Theory”. This interpretation places the General Theory in history.
As the General Theory was written in the early 1930s, the great financial and real contraction of the United States and the other capitalist economies of that time was a part of the evidence the theory aimed to explain. The financial instability hypothesis also draws upon the credit view of money and finance by Joseph Schumpeter (1934, Ch.3) Key works for the financial instability hypothesis in the narrow sense are, of course, Hyman P. Minsky (1975, 1986).

The theoretical argument of the financial instability hypothesis starts from the characterization of the economy as a capitalist economy with expensive capital assets and a complex, sophisticated financial system. The economic problem is identified following Keynes as the “capital development of the economy,” rather than the Knightian “allocation of given resources among alternative employments.” The focus is on an accumulating capitalist economy that moves through real calendar time.

The capital development of a capitalist economy is accompanied by exchanges of present money for future money. Present money pays for resources that go into the production of investment output, whereas the future money is the “profits” which will accrue to the capital asset owning firms (as the capital assets are used in production). As a result of the process by which investment is financed, the control over items in the capital stock by producing units is financed by liabilities – these are commitments to pay money at dates specified or as conditions arise. For each economic unit, the liabilities on its balance sheet determine a time series of prior payment commitments, even as the assets generate a time series of conjectured cash receipts.

This structure was well stated by Keynes (1972):

There is a multitude of real assets in the world which constitutes our capital wealth – buildings, stocks of commodities, goods in the course of manufacture and of transport, and so forth. The nominal owners of these assets, however, have not infrequently borrowed money [Keynes’ emphasis] in order to become possessed of them. To a corresponding extent the actual owners of wealth have claims, not on real assets, but on money. A considerable part of this financing takes place through the banking system, which interposes its guarantee between its depositors who lend it money, and its borrowing customers to whom it loans money wherewith to finance the purchase of real assets. The interposition of this veil of money between the real asset and the wealth owner is an especially marked characteristic of the modern world.” (p. l51)

This Keynes “veil of money” is different from the Quantity Theory of money “veil of money.” The Quantity Theory “veil of money” has the trading exchanges in commodity markets be of goods for money and money for goods: therefore, the exchanges are really of goods for goods. The Keynes veil implies that money is connected with financing through time. A part of the financing of the economy can be structured as dated payment commitments in which banks are the central player. The money flows are first from depositors to banks and from banks to firms: then, at some later dates, from firms to banks and from banks to their depositors. Initially, the exchanges are for the financing of investment, and subsequently, the exchanges fulfill the prior commitments which are stated in the financing contract.

In a Keynes “veil of money” world, the flow of money to firms is a response to expectations of future profits, and the flow of money from firms is financed by profits that are realized. In the Keynes set up, the key economic exchanges take place as a result of negotiations between generic bankers and generic businessmen. The documents “on the table” in such negotiations detail the costs and profit expectations of the businessmen: businessmen interpret the numbers and the expectations as enthusiasts, bankers as skeptics.

Thus, in a capitalist economy the past, the present, and the future are linked not only by capital assets and labor force characteristics but also by financial relations. The key financial relationships link the creation and the ownership of capital assets to the structure of financial relations and changes in this structure. Institutional complexity may result in several layers of intermediation between the ultimate owners of the communities’ wealth and the units that control and operate the communities’ wealth.

Expectations of business profits determine both the flow of financing contracts to business and the market price of existing financing contracts. Profit realizations determine whether the commitments in financial contracts are fulfilled – whether financial assets perform as the pro formas indicated by the negotiations.

In the modern world, analyses of financial relations and their implications for system behavior cannot be restricted to the liability structure of businesses and the cash flows they entail. Households (by the way of their ability to borrow on credit cards for big ticket consumer goods such as automobiles, house purchases, and to carry financial assets), governments (with their large floating and funded debts), and international units (as a result of the internationalization of finance) have liability structures which the current performance of the economy either validates or invalidates.

An increasing complexity of the financial structure, in connection with a greater involvement of governments as refinancing agents for financial institutions as well as ordinary business firms (both of which are marked characteristics of the modern world), may make the system behave differently than in earlier eras. In particular, the much greater participation of national governments in assuring that finance does not degenerate as in the 1929-1933 period means that the downside vulnerability of aggregate profit flows has been much diminished. However, the same interventions may well induce a greater degree of upside (i.e. inflationary) bias to the economy.

In spite of the greater complexity of financial relations, the key determinant of system behavior remains the level of profits. The financial instability hypothesis incorporates the Kalecki (1965)-Levy (1983) view of profits, in which the structure of aggregate demand determines profits. In the skeletal model, with highly simplified consumption behavior by receivers of profit incomes and wages, in each period aggregate profits equal aggregate investment. In a more complex (though still highly abstract) structure, aggregate profits equal aggregate investment plus the government deficit. Expectations of profits depend upon investment in the future, and realized profits are determined by investment: thus, whether or not liabilities are validated depends upon investment. Investment takes place now because businessmen and their bankers expect investment to take place in the future.

The financial instability hypothesis, therefore, is a theory of the impact of debt on system behavior and also incorporates the manner in which debt is validated. In contrast to the orthodox Quantity Theory of money, the financial instability hypothesis takes banking seriously as a profit-seeking activity. Banks seek profits by financing activity and bankers. Like all entrepreneurs in a capitalist economy, bankers are aware that innovation assures profits. Thus, bankers (using the term generically for all intermediaries in finance), whether they bebrokers or dealers, are merchants of debt who strive to innovate in the assets they acquire and the liabilities they market. This innovative characteristic of banking and finance invalidates the fundamental presupposition of the orthodox Quantity Theory of money to the effect that there is an unchanging “money” item whose velocity of circulation is sufficiently close to being constant: hence, changes in this money’s supply have a linear proportional relation to a well defined price level.

Three distinct income-debt relations for economic units, which are labeled as hedge, speculative, and Ponzi finance, can be identified.

Hedge financing units are those which can fulfill all of their contractual payment obligations by their cash flows: the greater the weight of equity financing in the liability structure, the greater the likelihood that the unit is a hedge financing unit. Speculative finance units are units that can meet their payment commitments on “income account” on their liabilities, even as they cannot repay the principle out of income cash flows. Such units need to “roll over” their liabilities: (e.g. issue new debt to meet commitments on maturing debt). Governments with floating debts, corporations with floating issues of commercial paper, and banks are typically hedge units.

For Ponzi units, the cash flows from operations are not sufficient to fulfill either the repayment of principle or the interest due on outstanding debts by their cash flows from operations. Such units can sell assets or borrow. Borrowing to pay interest or selling assets to pay interest (and even dividends) on common stock lowers the equity of a unit, even as it increases liabilities and the prior commitment of future incomes. A unit that Ponzi finances lowers the margin of safety that it offers the holders of its debts.

It can be shown that if hedge financing dominates, then the economy may well be an equilibrium seeking and containing system. In contrast, the greater the weight of speculative and Ponzi finance, the greater the likelihood that the economy is a deviation amplifying system. The first theorem of the financial instability hypothesis is that the economy has financing regimes under which it is stable, and financing regimes in which it is unstable. The second theorem of the financial instability hypothesis is that over periods of prolonged prosperity, the economy transits from financial relations that make for a stable system to financial relations that make for an unstable system.

In particular, over a protracted period of good times, capitalist economies tend to move from a financial structure dominated by hedge finance units to a structure in which there is large weight to units engaged in speculative and Ponzi finance. Furthermore, if an economy with a sizeable body of speculative financial units is in an inflationary state, and the authorities attempt to exorcise inflation by monetary constraint, then speculative units will become Ponzi units and the net worth of previously Ponzi units will quickly evaporate. Consequently, units with cash flow shortfalls will be forced to try to make position by selling out position. This is likely to lead to a collapse of asset values.

The financial instability hypothesis is a model of a capitalist economy which does not rely upon exogenous shocks to generate business cycles of varying severity. The hypothesis holds that business cycles of history are compounded out of (i) the internal dynamics of capitalist economies, and (ii) the system of interventions and regulations that are designed to keep the economy operating within reasonable bounds.

References

Fisher, Irving. 1933. “The Debt Deflation Theory of Great Depressions.” Econometrica 1: 337-57

Kalecki, Michal 1965. Theory of Economic Dynamics. London: Allen and Unwin

Keynes, John Maynard, 1936. The General Theory of Employment, Interest, and Money. New York: Harcourt Brace.

Keynes, John Maynard. 1972. Essays in Persuasion,The Collected Writings of John Maynard Keynes, Volume IX. MacMillan, St. Martins Press, for the Royal Economic Society, London and Basingstoke, p 151

Kindleberger, Charles 1978. Manias, Panics and Crashes. New York, Basic Books

Levy S. Jay and David A. 1983. Profits And The Future of American Society. New York, Harper and Row

Minsky, Hyman P. 1975. John Maynard Keynes. Columbia University Press.

Minsky, Hyman P. 1986. Stabilizing An Unstable Economy. Yale University Press.

Schumpeter, Joseph A. 1934. Theory of Economic Development. Cambridge, Mass. Harvard University Press

Wolfson, Martin H. 1986. Financial Crises. Armonk New York, M.E. Sharpe Inc.

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