Posts tagged investing
September 21, 2008
· Filed under business, economy, investing, money, politics, stock market · Tagged "Paulson's Monster", $11 trillion, $700 billion, ABK, ambac, bankruptcy, banks, Barclays, Berkshire Hathaway, bond insurer, economy, Google, hedge funds, Henry Paulson, investing, Lehman Brothers, MBI, MBIA, Moody's, SEC, Warren Buffett
“Paulson’s Monster”, as it’s being called, has now proposed the need for $700 billion of taxpayer dollars, raising the US debt limit to $11 trillion, to spin off the bad sectors of the financials into its own entity. Paulson claims his plan will “minimize” the cost to the taxpayer in the long run, but who can really be sure? As part of the plan, Paulson said that he was currently in talks with other countries for help. He wouldn’t disclose which countries.
Back in Ratings land, one ABK message boarder claimed that the Feds raided Moody’s on Friday looking for connections between the ratings company and hedge funds. No link was provided, and given that any Joe Schmo can go on a Google Finance board and post whatever he or she pleases, it could very well be completely fabricated. However, a Bloomberg article titled “Berkshire’s Bond Insurer, Moody’s Stake Face Probe”, reports that one such link may in fact come to light:
“Billionaire Warren Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway Inc. faces a probe by Connecticut’s attorney general for possible conflicts created by owning almost 20 percent of credit ratings company Moody’s Corp. while also running a new municipal bond insurer.
Moody’s gave its top rating last week to Berkshire Hathaway Assurance Corp., created in December as existing bond insurers struggled to maintain their AAA ratings. A favorable rating for Berkshire by New York-based Moody’s, or a lower rating for competitors including MBIA Inc. and Ambac Financial Group Inc., may give Buffett’s company an advantage.”
So maybe there is truth in rumor.
In other news, Barclays is the proud new owner of Lehman Brothers’s investment banking and trading businesses. The $1.75 billion deal approved yesterday is a definite bargain as compared to the one Barclays would have had to strike last week for Lehman’s entire assets before bankruptcy.
September 21, 2008
· Filed under business, economy, investing, money, politics, stock market · Tagged ABK, AIG, ambac, banks, banned, Barclays, Ben Bernanke, Charles Schumer, economy, financials, Henry Paulson, investing, LEH, Lehman Brothers, LEHMQ, MBI, MBIA, Moody's, Moody's Ratings, short selling, stocks
Whoa mama. I was definitely wrong about the profit-taking. The US market rallied harder in the last two days than it has in 38 years- longer than I’ve been alive! Lehman Brothers, now on the OTC board as LEHMQ, gained 313% on rumors that it would sell parts of itself to foreign banks. Barclays is back in the running. In just the last two days of trading, I made up almost all of what I had lost in the last week and a half.
The SEC banned ALL short selling- regular and naked alike- of 799 financials for the next 10 days. The United Kingdom temporarily halted short selling yesterday, and the US did the same. This is a huge step from just banning naked shorting; this is a total ban on betting that stocks will lose value, essentially disqualifying half of the game. Hillary Clinton and Charles Schumer, both New York Senators, proposed the ban. Critics say this ban will warp the market, making it seem as if the financial stocks are worth more than they are. But when naked shorting was banned in July, the effect lasted long after the ban was lifted. In fact, it lasted right up until last week when AIG teetered and fell and dragged the entire sector along with it. So in a market that is so emotionally driven, a little banning may do the trick to snap the depression (no pun intended).
Henry Paulson, our Treasury Secretary, and Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke proposed the idea to spin all bad parts of financial institutions into its own entity- a black hole of badness. This idea reminds me of that story I had to read in high school about the utopian society that was only a utopia because of the little girl who lived in a cage in the basement of someone’s house. Remember that one? I was never big on reading, so titles slip my mind. I just remember the girl in the cage and the annual field trip every schoolkid would take to see the girl in the dirty dark cage dungeon as a reminder of why they lived as perfectly as they did. I wonder if part of the Paulson and Bernanke plan will have the American people visiting the dark entity once a year. Oh wait, now I get it. We will be visiting once a year- at tax time. Seems these two guys kept up on their high school reading.
Meanwhile in Ratings Land, Moody’s threatened to downgrade Ambac (ABK) and MBIA (MBI), which dropped ABK 42% and another 27% in afterhours, and MBI 8% and another 8% in afterhours. The ABK message boards caught fire, and it seems Moody’s may catch some of it by Monday, if not sooner.
Do you know the name of that book yet? Maybe it was a short story.
September 16, 2008
· Filed under business, economy, investing, money, politics, stock market · Tagged $85 billion, AIG, bailout, bankruptcy, banks, Barclays, Christopher Cox, crude oil, economy, Enron, gasoline prices, Goldman Sachs, government bailout, GS, Hank Greenberg, interest rate, investing, Lehman, Lehman Brothers, MER, Merrill Lynch, Morgan Stanley, MS, naked short selling, real estate, SEC, uptick rule, WaMu, Washington Mutual, WM, WorldCom
Where to start? All these stories are unfolding all at the same time. Most people alive have never seen such things.
AIG no doubt drove the market today. Lehman was six times as big as Enron and WorldCom, and AIG is 50% bigger than Lehman. Yesterday when it became clear that Goldman Sachs (GS) and Morgan Stanley (MS) were last two independent investment banks left standing, the government asked the two giants to inject capital into AIG to keep it alive. When that didn’t go over so well, the fed went back to the drawing board and came up with a new idea, which was later captured in a Bloomberg article titled “Fed Said to Reverse Stance, Consider AIG Loan Package”. Originally the government said that it would absolutely not help AIG, but throughout the day AIG’s tentacles were measured and realized to stretch much further than previously thought. The news stories about AIG threw the stock all over the place today. As an example of just how turbulent the ride was, at 2:30PM the stock was trading at $2.76. At 3PM, the stock was trading at $5. That’s an 81% increase in 30 minutes. AIG is the world’s largest insurer, and unless it’s shored up, many institutions (including regional banks, as exposed by CNNMoney.com) will likely get knocked out.
Reuters released an odd article today about former chief executive of AIG Hank Greenberg leading a hoard of investors in a bid to take over AIG. I think I’ll let that one rest.
The Federal Reserve, against what everyone predicted, left interests rates alone today. The rate will stay at 2%.
When the market broke in 1937 signaling the Great Depression, the US Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) created the “uptick” rule, which essentially stopped people from betting against failing stocks. “Naked short selling” is what it’s called now, and is when a trader buys a put for an underlying amount of stock he or she would not be able to deliver. The SEC did not eliminate the uptick rule until July 6, 2007.
Our government tried to being back a sort of uptick rule this past July and it did, in fact, help the financials rebound. You can still see the ban reflected in most stock charts, not only the financials, from July 15 until the beginning weeks of August.
Now that banks are acting more like houses made of cards than they are the good old impenetrable banks we all grew up with, the government and some analysts have began buzzing about a possible reinstatement of the uptick rule. Back in August when the ban on naked short selling was lifted off the 19 financials it protected, the plan was to create “within a few months” a sweeping rule would eliminate excessive short selling. Some, like Alan Greenspan, think this is eliminating an important side of the market, but when a bet is sure, much like oil was six months ago, people will take and take advantage of it.
The head of the SEC, Christopher Cox, announced today that the “within a few months” will probably be this week (TheStreet.com) in light of what happened yesterday and the free lunch frenzy it caused among the traders who know how to sell short naked.
I’m not going to lie; In this economy, with oil going down yet gasoline refusing to budge, the price of food through the roof, the cost of electricity forcing me to cram foods into my toaster oven instead of firing up my electric stove, and clothing being so expensive I’m at least 3 seasons behind (if not many more), I’d naked short sell a few of the stocks I own if I knew how to. But just a few, not all day and not to the point I felt sick with guilt. I wonder if anyone feels guilty. Doubt it.
I bought long into Merrill Lynch (MER) today, and added to my positions of Citigroup (C) and Washington Mutual (WM). Washington Mutual is a real gamble, but MER should be one stock I won’t have to worry about.
The Dow crossed from red to green and back again 15 times today and really rallied in the last two hours of trading to close up 141 points to $11,059. My stocks that gained today included C, MBI, MER, MTG, RDN, RF, and WM, but it wasn’t enough to have me end the day in the green, and in fact, I’m now overall up just $2.08. But I’m keeping the faith that regulations will come this week and we’ll look back on this time as another bottom.
When the top stories are no longer about the banks, people are going to start asking questions about the price of gasoline. Crude oil slipped another $4.56 today to close at $91.15, so why is gas still over $3.50 a gallon? I smell “pissed off” coming.
In late-breaking news tonight, Barclays announced it put a bid in to buy Lehman Brothers for $2 billion, and the government decided to loan AIG $85 billion.
Also in tonight’s late-breaking news, an SEC spokesman told Reuters that “The American Bankers Association said many of its members have seen precipitous declines in their stock, high trading volumes and huge spikes in so-called failures to deliver [due to naked short sellers], leading them to conclude that their stock is being manipulated. The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission expects to issue new rules against abusive short selling within 24 hours.”
Within 24 hours. This is great news.
September 9, 2008
· Filed under economy, investing, money, politics, stock market · Tagged ABK, ArthurDental, BAC, C, dow, Fannie Mae, FMH, freddie mac, investing, LEH, Lehman Brothers, MA, oil, OPEC, PMI, RDN, reuters, September 9 2008, STI, TGIC, TMA, trading, Visa, Washington Mutual, WM
My God, what have I done? All across the country, investors in all sectors and companies must be asking themselves the same thing. I know my friends are. After yesterday’s huge [emotional] rally in all sectors but one (energy), today seemed completely irrational. Everything fell. This was more than profit-taking. All of yesterday’s gains, 280 points, were shaved off the Dow as the index slipped all day to close down to $11,230, as investors in the financials asked themselves one extra question: “will any financial survive?”
Lehman Brothers (LEH), Washington Mutual (WM), Radian Group (RDN), PMI Group (PMI), Ambac Financial (ABK), First Marblehead (FMH), MBIA, Inc. (MBI), MGIC Investment (MTG), Triad Guarantee (TGIC), and Thornburg Mortgage (TMA) are just some of the financial institutions that had double-digit percentage losses today, and those are just the ones with losses greater than 10%. Citigroup (C), Bank of America (BAC), JP Morgan (JPM), SunTrust (STI), American Express (AXP), and even Visa (V) and MasterCard (MA) lost today. Lehman Brothers (LEH) is reporting their third quarter earnings tomorrow- a week early- after their Korea Development Bank deal fell through and its stock price lost 45% of its value today. LEH stock did bump up 7% in afterhours trading, so maybe there’s good news on the horizon. But no doubt, this bad news cast even more doubt into the financial sector today and helped push share values down. Today was very, very painful. Luckily I was so busy at work, with teaching, duties, and meetings, that I had no time to sit down and digest what was happening.
But my friends did. One of my stock friends, who has made a small fortune day-trading these financials, sent me an article that eased my mind a bit. It definitely crossed my mind a few times in the last couple days that my experiment may not work out after all, but the article he sent gave me some hope. It was titled “S&P Picks and Pans: Wells Fargo, Washington Mutual, TW Telecom, JC Penney, Avery Denison”, and was an article in BusinessWeek online. After all the upgrades and downgrades and rating cuts by people with questionable credentials and too much power, it was nice to read an article from a reputable source deeming one of my stocks, WM, a “hold”. If Washington Mutual is a hold and its going through some actual concrete, documented troubles, then my thinking (and hope) is that yesterday and today’s major sell-offs were out of pure fear. But I still hope the sell-off doesn’t continue!
A Reuters article from yesterday titled “Ambac’s planned muni insurer may be hit by changes” shed some light on what the common sentiment towards the mortgage and bond insurers might be. “In another even more fundamental change, agencies are mulling a shift in how they rate muni debt, using the same scale used for corporate debt. That would result in widespread rating upgrades for municipal bonds, which have a much smaller risk of default than corporate bonds. Higher ratings would in turn reduce the need for insurance.” If there’s less risk of default, then there’s less need for insurance.
One last article I’ll quote, this one from MarketWatch.com titled “Community building ire MarketWatch readers kindle own outrage over Fannie, Freddie takeover” quoted ArthurDental, who is a member of the MarketWatch Community. “”Everyone gets upset about financial aid to the poor,” ArthurDental wrote, “but where’s the outrage when taxpayers foot the bill because some ‘investments’ went sour? So stockholders would be largely wiped out; why then aren’t bondholders made to pay for their mistakes, too?”
It’s telling that this article didn’t hit yesterday when the market soared, but ArthurDental is right. When SSBX failed, I lost my investment. But when Freddie and Fannie exposed themselves to trillions of dollars in bad mortgages and therefore didn’t have the capital to pay the bonds it issued to China, the two lending giants got a slap on the wrist and trillions of our taxpayer dollars. Hey, I made a mistake investing in a company run by a McCain, where’s my money? It ain’t coming and I have to deal. And that’s the way it should be.
That Hurricane Ike took a turn south, and the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) will likely maintain its oil production even though demand is down, caused the price of crude oil to fall to a 5-month low. Crude oil lost $3.08 to close the day at $103.26 a barrel. I lost $1700 today, or in my brother’s terminology, “seventeen hundo”. Ouch.
So what is going to happen now that the rules of the game have completely changed? I don’t dare speculate. But whatever it is that eventually happens seems as if it won’t make itself known for a while. For now, I’ll keep the faith. I took a gamble and put in a limit order for 25 more shares of WM today, and you can imagine my surprise when I signed on later, saw the stock price was at $3.30, and that my order executed at $3.60. When I put the order in, I assumed it was so low that it would expire unexecuted.
And more than anything, tomorrow’s a new day when anything can happen.
September 8, 2008
· Filed under money, politics, stock market · Tagged Alan Fishman, Andrew McCain, dollar, dollar value, dow closed, financials, Fitch Ratings, freddie mac, Friedman Billings Ramsey, Hurricane Ike, investing, John McCain's son, Kerry Killinger, money, oil closed, Radian Group, RDN, SCA, September 8 2008, Silver State Bancorp, SSBX, Steve Stelmach, stocks, Syncora, trading, Washington Mutual, WM
“Never count your chickens before they’ve hatched” goes the saying, but I didn’t follow this advice. This morning during the premarket, I busted out my calculator to crunch just how much I was set to make based on the premarket numbers, and it was a lot. So you can imagine my surprise when I signed back into Etrade at 11AM to see most of my stocks in the red and Freddie trading at $1 (which actually was better than I expected). Indeed, the financials all opened up big- real big- and I’m sure today’s blip will be seen for years to come. But then things happened. I’m still not sure exactly what, but maybe it was a composite of a bunch of things:
Washington Mutual (WM) gave their CEO Kerry Killinger the boot, instated veteran Alan Fishman, and was told by the Office of Thrift Supervision to provide “an updated, multi-year business plan and forecast for its earnings, asset quality, capital and business segment performance” (SmartMoney.com). Sure sounds like micromanagement to me. WM closed the day down 5.62% after being down 20% during some of the session.
Syncora’s (SCA) rating was withdrawn by Fitch Ratings, who had just in August changed SCA’s rating from “evolving” to “positive”. Who are these Fitch Ratings people anyway, and why does their word mean so much? SCA closed the day down 4% after being down by double digit percentages various times during today’s session.
Radian Group (RDN) opened the day at $5.50, which was up from Friday’s close of $4.79, steadily fell throughout the day like its siblings, then fell off in the last few minutes of trading to close the day down 17%. Google message boarders think someone knows something, although no news has yet hit.
Silver State Bancorp (SSBX), driven into the ground by John McCain’s son Andrew McCain, failed on Friday, making US bank casualty number eleven. I held just 125 shares of them, worth just over $100, so the hit wasn’t so hard. But that with Freddie had me reeling. I contemplated selling WM and SCA, or buying more WM, or buying Deerfield Capital (DFR), or not buying them, or waiting it out, or putting a 60-day limit order in, but in the end I did nothing. I sold SSBX at market for a gain less than the commission and held on to FRE. I decided that once the smoke clears, which stock is which and where each is going will become much clearer. But I sure do wish those pre- and early-market numbers held! And most of all, I hope today isn’t a sign that the US banking industry is going the way of Wal-Mart (who coincidentally closed the day up 2%), and headed to put all the little guys out of business. One analyst, Steve Stelmach of Friedman, Billings, Ramsey & Co. said that “mortgage insurance could become an obsolete form of credit enhancement” in the long-term because of the bailout. He was loosely referring to the drop in RDN’s share price and how the company, and ones like it, could be phased out.
The Dow ironically traced a smiley face, opening way up, dipping a bit, then closing the day up 289 to $11,510. Because of Hurricane Ike barreling towards the Gulf of Mexico, oil closed the day up as well, but just by 11 cents to $106.34. The dollar is at its highest value in nearly a year! It would now take just $1.41 to get one euro. Including the hit from SSBX, I closed the day down $323, $211 of which was from FRE.
You win some, you lose some; I just wish I had won today. The market rallied and I was left in its dust. With any luck, much of today’s activity in the financial sector was just profit-taking and the days to come will reveal the real reaction to this past weekend’s news. Next time I won’t count my chickens before they’ve hatched and started laying eggs of their own!
August 29, 2008
· Filed under money, stock market · Tagged banks, dollar best montly gain in 16 years, financial sector, financials, FRE, Gustav, investing, McCain, money, Palin, PMI, TMA, trading
Exactly three years since Katrina, President Bush declared a state of emergency for Louisiana. Gustav, now at hurricane status and predicted to morph into a category 3, is on its way. John McCain chose Governor Sarah Palin of Alaska as his running mate, which pretty much nailed his coffin shut. Maybe the thinking is that he’ll lasso in all the Hilary supporters who feel abandoned by their party, but I think the big companies already know Obama’s slated to win. Ford and Chrysler applied for, and will likely receive in January, $25 billion in government loans to transform their outdated factories into ones that can build alternatively fueled vehicles. This tells me that these two giants are already hedging the tax increases they know a Democrat will bring. Hey, if you know you’re going to have to pay more taxes, why not ask for some of the money back under the guise “green energy”? Democrats love everything green!
I’m too cheap to buy cable (and I’d end up watching The Hills reruns all day) so I never get to see Bloomberg on television. But today I spent some time at my Dad’s, who has every station imaginable, so I got to see the channel for the first time. Quotes stream along the bottom of the screen, as anyone who watches the station would know, and whereas yesterday would have been a stream of green speckled with red, today it was just the opposite. And the green speckles, with the exception of UnitedHealth Group (UNH), were all the financials. Although a far cry from yesterday, the financial sector held up today and the profit grabbing wasn’t nearly as rampant as I assumed it would be after yesterday’s major gains and right before a holiday weekend. The PMI Group (PMI) and Thornburg Mortgage (TMA) grew the most, while the tide finally caught up to Freddie Mac (FRE), which fell 13%.
The Dow lost 171 points today to close the week at $11,543, and oil also lost, closing down 13 cents to $115.46. The dollar reportedly had its best monthly gain since October 1992, which is an entire decade before its value began falling against other world currencies. The dollar is on its way back.
Because I go back to work on Tuesday, this may be my last entry for a while. It’s going to be hard making the transition from watching the market continuously to not at all, but work calls and I’m hardly in a position to quit. I like my job teaching math, and in fact, our math MCAS scores improved exponentially from two years ago to this past year. Fifteen percent of our students scored advanced or proficient in 2007 on the math portion of the exam, and this past year that percentage jumped to 45. Eighty percent of our students passed the math section, which is pretty good for an urban high school. Yeah, I’m looking forward to going back, and maybe even teaching my algebra kids a thing or two about the stock market. Who knows? Maybe one of them will be the next Warren Buffett!
August 28, 2008
· Filed under money, stock market · Tagged money, trading, ambac, ABK, RDN, investing, MBI, Gustav, MBIA, IEA
Yertle, my 7,000 year old turtle, woke me up this morning grinding her shell against my bedroom furniture she’s a little too big to fit under, and because it was already light out, my efforts to fall back asleep failed. So, I got up and of course got onto Etrade to watch the premarket. Expecting to see all zeros in the % change column in my watch list, you can imagine my surprise when most were green. I had never realized that the premarket watch list reflected the closing price from the afterhours the night before, and because good news came out about MBIA (MBI), it blew up over night and took a lot of its fellow bondsmen with it, including ABK, PMI, SCA, TMA, and RDN.
Yertle’s not really 7,000 years old; actually I have no idea how old she is. She could be 7,000, she could be 70. All I know is that I’ve had her for 12 years and she’s about the same size as when my friend first handed her down to me, which leads me to believe she’s probably older than anyone would guess and that I’ll have to will her to someone when I die.
Europe and Japan are reportedly headed towards their own recessions, but Bloomberg reported that our economy- possibly fueled by exports to these struggling regions- grew faster in the second quarter than originally calculated. This boosted today’s market big time. Trading is thought to have been the biggest contributor to the growth of the economy in the quarter, and a bigger contributor than it has been in 30 years. Well no kidding! Everyone knows to get in at the bottom!
My car got towed today because I was on the wrong side of the street for street sweeping, and it wasn’t until I got to the tow lot that I realized I had my debit instead of my credit card. So I got back on my bike, rode back home, got the card, rode back to the tow lot, and paid them $117.47 (on top of the $40 ticket this fair City slid under my wiper) to bail my car out of car prison. If it wasn’t for MBI and Ambac (ABK), which came out of the cut today with a 41% gain sometime between the tow fiasco and when I finally sat back down to look at everything, I would have been way more pissed. Street sweeping. Please! Five seconds after the zambonie passes, trash is back on the street. What a joke.
The stars align once in a while in the financials sector, and today was one of those days. Thursday August 14 was the last time it happened. Today’s massive gains were a combination of the revised economy numbers, MBIA’s good news, and the Bloomberg report that “Crude oil fell more than $2 a barrel after the International Energy Agency (IEA) said it would tap strategic stockpiles, if needed, because of Tropical Storm Gustav.” Forecasters are now predicting Gustav will turn Category 3 and is headed straight to Louisiana. Oil crashed at 11AM because of the IEA’s announcement, then took a bit of a bounce around noon, but the damage was already done. The Dow gained 212 to end the day at $11,715, oil lost $2.56 to end the day at $115.59, my stocks pulled in $1,700, and so probably ended the week’s rally. No doubt the profit takers will enter the market tomorrow.
August 25, 2008
· Filed under money, stock market · Tagged Alexei Kudrin, Biden, bonds, Columbian Bank and Trust, Denver, FRE, freddie mac, investing, money, russia, stocks, Thornburg, TMA, trading
Barack Obama announced over the weekend that his running mate will be Joe Biden. The Democratic National Convention begins tonight in Denver, Colorado.
Columbian Bank and Trust Co. of Topeka, Kansas collapsed, bringing the death toll to nine, and Korea Development Bank is having second thoughts about buying Lehman.
My stocks were split in the morning: PMI, FMD, FRE, RDN, TMA, ABK, MBI, and C all saw green while SSBX, SCA, WM, CHC, RF, NCC, and MTG were in the red. Freddie Mac has seen this same pattern day in and day out: big daily swings, which have no doubt has been making some big people some big money. Russia’s Finance Minister Alexei Kudrin reported that his country has made over one billion dollars (670 million euros at today’s exchange) on Freddie Mac bonds in the last six months, and Reuters has reported that demand is up for their 3-month and 6-month bills, so maybe today’s gain has some backbone to it. Warren Buffett says it’s “game over” for Freddie and Fannie, so it could be the run on bonds is an anticipation of a government bailout. Bonds get paid first. Time will tell. The stock has lost 2/3 of its value since I bought in, so at this point my 50 shares aren’t really worth worrying about.
Oil was up in the morning but went red by around 11AM. Resales of homes previously owned rose in July from the 10-year hit in June, and were the highest since February, which beat the Street’s forecast. The median home price has dropped 7% in a month, making is seem as if home prices may finally be meeting buyers’ expectations. Still, the amount of homes for sale in July was the highest ever, according to TradeTheNews.com.
Once the lunch bell rang, oil went green again, and the Dow really started to nosedive. Citigroup (C) clicked into red, and FMD followed once the brokers got back from lunch, but FRE, RDN, and TMA really started to take off. I’d think it was the bond insurers shining again after the news about Russia’s take on FRE bonds, but SCA wasn’t following suit. I take the fact that any stocks are up on a day the Dow is down over 200 points as a good sign of things to come, but the market these days is anyone’s interpret.
Meanwhile, as a throwback to my greener days, America’s Wind Energy (AWNE), the last slug standing, continues to drop. By now, much like with FRE, I’ve lost so much on the thing it’s not even worth thinking about, except for the fact that AWNE was supposed to be bought out by a larger wind company at some point and I continually wonder when that day will be. I’m not really even sure if that day has passed or has yet to come, or if it will ever come to fruition, or if that fruition will be fruition at all. All I do know is that “AWNE” may not even front an actual company and its presence in my portfolio serves as a constant reminder that day and swing trading OTCs on good news may be ok, but trying to invest in one of these small non-companies with low trading volumes is never ever ever a good idea. Ever.
After some flip flopping between red and green, my stocks eked out a modest $80 gain with TMA and FRE as the day’s big gainers and WM and MTG as the day’s big losers. The Dow lost 241 points to close the day at $11,386, and oil gained 52 cents to close the day at $115.11.
All eyes on Denver.
August 21, 2008
· Filed under money, stock market · Tagged dow, financials, first marblehead, fmd, investing, money, oil closed at, russia, shana donohue, shanadonohue, stocks, Thornburg, TMA, trading
This morning was filled with even more doom and gloom, until around 10AM when Freddie turned, taking other financials with it. One by one, red turned to white turned to green, but not before I picked up more shares of MGIC Investment (MTG), Radian Group (RDN), and 100 initial shares of First Marblehead (FMD). Yeah I know what you’re thinking: “where’d she get the money?” I did an awful thing- I took a credit card advance. But just until tomorrow! This week’s downs were too good to pass up, so I took the advance for two days until I get paid. OK, now that I’m all confessed…
FMD came out with earnings after the closing bell today, and of course posted a loss. But considering this week’s terrible performance across the sector has nothing to do with actual company performances and all to do with worries about the imminent government bail out of Freddie, I’d say FMD is a decent bet under $4. This stock has a 52-week high of $41, which by my very scientific calculation yields a fraction under 0.1. If First Marblehead rebounds, it could potentially multiply my investment by ten.
By 10:45AM, Freddie blinked back into red, essentially ending the morning’s rally. It saw green again for a bit later in the day, but the window closed. On the other hand, Fannie Mae (FNM) was one of the financial sector’s big gainers today. Thornburg mortgage (TMA) that on Wednesday saw a crash, hit 50% above open by 11:30 AM on no [public] news at all. TMA closed the day up 35%.
But oil was the day’s real leader. It was up all day on news that Russia may disrupt its oil flow (Bloomberg reported them as being the world’s second largest oil producer) because of yesterday’s signing of a missile-shield agreement between the US and Poland. Once everyone realizes that the US has no plans to piss off Russia, oil will again fall. Oil closed the day up $5.62 to $121.18 per barrel. The Dow traveled sideways today and closed up just 12 points to $11,430. The dollar fell against the euro; it would now take $1.487 to get one of them.