OT: The Best No-Brainer Idea in the Market Today

The Best No-Brainer Idea in the Market Today By Jeff Clark Tuesday, November 30, 2010 It's all fun and games until somebody loses an IRA.

By now we're all familiar with the games central bankers play? print a little money here, prop up the market there, pass the buck like a hot potato, and do everything possible to keep the charade going.

We put up with the games mostly because? well? I don't really know why we put up with them. Maybe it's apathy or laziness. Or maybe we're all so busy trying to keep our own heads above water, we're not paying attention.

But we can't ignore what's going on in Europe right now.

Last week, Ireland's government announced it would use (confiscate, seize, steal) $30 billion from the country's public pension program to purchase Irish government bonds. Hungarian officials announced a similar program using $15 billion of public pension assets. French officials also surrendered to the idea and are putting $45 billion of pension assets into France's sovereign debt.

Just to be clear? Much of the proceeds these governments receive from selling bonds are used to fund social programs such as welfare, health care, and unemployment benefits. So, by using pension fund assets to buy these bonds, the governments are taking long-term savings from hardworking, industrious individuals? and giving the money to those who are currently down and out.

What happens years from now when the hardworking, industrious folks decide to retire and discover their money isn't there, or it's worth only a small fraction of its original value?

Of course, government officials will argue this is a temporary measure to bridge the funding gap caused by the weak global economy. When the economy improves, tax revenues will increase, and they'll be able to pay down the debt and replenish the pension fund coffers.

Bull.

The funding problems are systemic. They're not the result of economic downturns. They're the result of stupid politicians making stupid promises to stupid people. "From those who can to those who need" may sound good on paper, but it fails miserably in practice.

The real issue, however, goes beyond the politics of socialism and/or communism. What does it say about the quality of a government's debt when the only entity willing to purchase it is the issuing government itself?

Now, you can dismiss this as a European problem ? just a bunch of Irish, French, and Hungarian politicos doing whatever they can to appease the masses and keep their cushy offices. Why should we care?

We should care because it's happening here too ? in the good old U.S. of A.

The Fed is already using taxpayer money to prop up the bond market and keep interest rates artificially low. Once again, what does it say about the quality of a government's debt when the only entity willing to purchase it is the issuing government itself?

And? does anybody remember the trial balloon the current administration floated several months ago? You know? the one about using public pensions to buy annuities backed by U.S. Treasury securities.

None of this happens by accident.

Central bankers talk to each other. They know the ticking time bomb everyone is trying to kick down the road. And they know if it gets to the United States, it's a dead end. There's nowhere else to go.

So what can you do?

First, if you're a government employee and have a government pension, you need to do whatever you can to take control of the assets yourself. NOW. Talk to your administrator and find out what your options are.

And if you're a speculator and you're willing to bet the jig is up within the next several months, shorting the long-term Treasury bond market is the best no-brainer idea since I wrote about betting on a dollar rally in October.

Best regards and good trading,

Jeff Clark

Reply to
Robert Baer
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The money wasn't "there" anyhow. It was merely a promise to come up with some money some day. The idea of a government "saving" money is meaningless.

What they are doing now is moving bits from one double-float variable in a spreadsheet to a different double-float on the same spreadsheet. Meaningless.

The only investments a society can make, excepting maybe gold ingots, is in kids and productivity. Stashing fictitious dollars into computer accounts is an illusion.

If by "trading" you mean buying stocks or bonds, that's an illusion too. They only have value because other people like you think they have value, and you are playing against professions and against the house and against inflation. It's a fool's game.

John

Reply to
John Larkin

Well, technically, bonds do have a real value. They are a promise to pay a certain amount by a certain day. The gamble, of course, is that the entity that issued the bond will have funds to redeem it at the end of the term...

Now, the insanity is all this trading bonds back and forth!

Charlie

Reply to
Charlie E.

And technically stocks have value, because they're partial ownership in a money-making enterprise, and will lead to return at some future point. But they're easy to overvalue when people forget that fact.

--

Tim Wescott
Wescott Design Services
http://www.wescottdesign.com

Do you need to implement control loops in software?
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Reply to
Tim Wescott

And hope it's not inflated too much.

John

Reply to
John Larkin

"I wonder how much money people will exchange for pieces of plastic before they figure out it's not real?" --- God, "Right Use of Will"

Cheers! Rich

Reply to
Rich Grise

Duh. Follow the money!

Cheers! Rich

Reply to
Rich Grise

They use computers and modems to do the transactions? ;-)

Cheers! Rich

Reply to
Rich Grise

..tell that to the fools that are making money; i get over 10% dividends on a number of my investments and the stock value has also gone up...

Reply to
Robert Baer

..meaning you do not like to be a traitor..err..trader?

Reply to
Robert Baer

No need to hope, there are balance sheets, 10K, and other SEC filings to go by, as well as valuation of the company, etc not to mentoin integrity of the managers (not like Government Motors where they had a loss for 20 years before whoopsie).

Reply to
Robert Baer

Perhaps use Windows so that Ben B. does not need a helicopter - just toss the money out an (open) window? Oops..Windows is not an open system..back to the helicopter!

Reply to
Robert Baer

t

Yes, P/E ratio which is usually high for popular stocks like Google with a P/E of 23. You only have to wait 23 years to get your money back. Or, GM with a p/e of 146 according to Yahoo finance. That must be a typo. Who would wait 146 years to get their money back?

-Bill

Reply to
Bill Bowden

t

Yes, P/E ratio which is usually high for popular stocks like Google with a P/E of 23. You only have to wait 23 years to get your money back. Or, GM with a p/e of 146 according to Yahoo finance. That must be a typo. Who would wait 146 years to get their money back?

-Bill

Reply to
Bill Bowden

Don't worry, nothing with GM has changed. They will go bankrupt again. What a looser operation.

tm

Reply to
tm

...but it's Government Motors...don't you _trust_ the government?

Reply to
Robert Baer

yes..the government is...

Reply to
Robert Baer

Looks like a bargain compared to Amazon that, at one time, had zero earnings and hence a P-E ratio of infinity? :-)

Reply to
Joel Koltner

Of course not, but I'm not allowed to kill them either. )-;

Thanks, Rich

Reply to
Rich Grise

Did Amazon ever have zero earnings? I mean, they actually sold things. OTOH, Google!

Reply to
krw

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