would like to thank the Academy
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Excellent! That means soon you will see Bear nice and clear, so you can hit him better when you throw a shoe at him.
Did you get anything for the wife yet? Diamonds!?
Yep, I have seen futures change on a dime, but overall market going down, still a lot of ugliness out there, don't see what this rally is all about, but it was time for a bounce I guess. Still think we head back down to about where we strarted. (At least I hope!)
Hey Stuff. Hope all went well with appointments.
AGH! And then it POPS again, real fast. Killing me.
SPY really dying now, back to profitable. DIE SPY!
Friggin SPY put is driving me to drinking....and all I got is WATER! Heading back down now, was a gut check there for a few minutes. Back to even.
Housing is looking weak, and it is tied with it, so I am hoping it follows the likes of LEN and BZH moves like yesterday.
Also got some of those TXI Puts. $40 DEC puts for .80.
Also got TXI $40 Puts at .80, a whopping 9 contracts.
Did it again, shorting spy with $137.50 Puts at .69. Cringe time!
Did it. GOt $137.50 Puts AGAIN for .69, hoping for SPY to die now.
Going to fade this bounce in SPY at some point. Watching. Looks like we fill the gap!
Going to fade this bounce in SPY at some point. Watching.
Thanks DA! Good luck in market today.
Did a nice run out here before signing on. It is nippy in the morning and night, but gets in the high 80s during the day. Meanwhile, my wife is COLD in New York. I told her to SUCK IT UP. I think I am getting slapped next year.
<ritholtz>THIS IS REALLY QUITE FASCINATING WONKY STUFF The Lender of Last Resort: Lessons from the Fed’s First 100 Years http://t.co/8AH8QCGK
$MSFT down 5% in premarket now. How many product fumbles/internal battles can Ballmer weather? CNBCMelloy
My Giants still kicking. Still depressed by the Yankees sweep. UGH!
Man, markets are RED this morning. Wondering if there will even be a sympathy bounce somewhere. Probably not. And to think I was playing $137.50 puts yesterday and did NOT hold them.
Good morning DA. Happy Vets day to you and the REAL Gloomy Butt.
Wow, RED futures. I faded the SPY pop yesterday, may be good to go opposite today and play a possible recovery as the day goes. Will watch the charts.
How to invest in marijuana legalization
Mark Twain is said to have remarked that a gold rush is a good time to be in the pick and shovel business. Investors may be able to apply that same bit of wisdom to the growing number of U.S. states that have legalized pot.
Although federal law prohibits the sale or possession of marijuana, Massachusetts last week joined the ranks of states — 18 plus Washington, D.C. — that allow its use for people suffering from chronic illnesses like cancer, HIV/AIDS, multiple sclerosis and epilepsy. In Washington and Colorado, meanwhile, voters passed an initiative to allow pot for recreational use. Those changes have kickstarted a small but fast-growing medical-marijuana industry, estimated to be worth about $1.7 billion as of 2011, according to See Change Strategy, an independent financial-analysis firm that specializes in new markets. In Colorado alone, sales topped $181 million in 2010, and the business employed 4,200 state-licensed workers, says Aaron Smith, executive director of the National Cannabis Industry Association , a nonprofit trade group that campaigns for marijuana’s federal legalization.
In addition to profiting itself from growing and selling marijuana, the industry benefits a slew of other businesses, such as insurers, lawyers and agricultural-equipment firms, experts say. “Call it the ‘green rush,’” says Derek Peterson, CEO of GrowOp Technology , an online retailer of hydroponics — products used in the cultivation of indoor plants — and a subsidiary of OTC stock Terra Tech /quotes/zigman/8701126/quotes/nls/trtc TRTC +16.00% . “The industry is expanding, and there are all kinds of investment opportunities
MORE - http://www.marketwatch.com/story/how-to-invest-in-marijuana-2012-11-13?siteid=rss&rss=1
Hoping for SBUX to have a little pop this morning back to GREEN so I can go with my Puts a little cheaper.
Also watching SHLD, V, BMRN, and TXI for PUTS.
Am back Stuff, and hope to be on for a bit. Internet good so far, fingers crossed!
Carl Icahn Shows New 9.99% Stake in Greenbrier Companies $GBX - 13D
Good MORNING Stuff. Glad you made it. Will be off for a run shortly, then back on after shower and dinner. I think they fixed my internet speed issue FINALLY!
Ritholtz on Obama Re-Election, Fiscal Cliff http://t.co/g33pHaGH
Goldman Sachs Upgrades F5 Networks ($FFIV) to Buy, Says Estimates Have Stabilized http://stks.co/cEAm
Though Home Depot has beat, I don't think there is a LOT of excitement out there with it. Think people were expecting MORE. Will be interesting to see where it goes. Still think SHLD tanks after Thursday.
How ya doin' Ske? I hope there is NO snow out there!
Home Depot quarterly profit rises
6:07am EST
(Reuters) - Home Depot Inc (HD.N: Quote, Profile, Research, Stock Buzz) reported a higher quarterly profit on Tuesday as the world's largest home improvement chain benefited from recent improvements in the U.S. housing market.
Net earnings rose to $947 million, or 63 cents per share, in the third quarter ended on October 28 from $934 million, or 60 cents per share, a year earlier.
(Reporting by Martinne Geller in New York; Editing by Lisa Von Ahn)
All I know's what I been told.....
I will STOP there, but you know the rest. And it is COLD!
Kind of like
57 Chevy and a tank full of gas....
Hopefully you and Longhorn are having fond memories with these songs, lol.
No complaints bro. Getting ready to do a run, then dinner, and then trading. Hopefully they worked out my slow connection for me.
Hello Den! Hope you are drinking GOOD BELGIAN BEER for me.
LOL, not MY state. New York will forever be BLUE.
Wow, what perfect timing, we were JUST talking about that. Seems EVERYONE is getting caught with their *ahem* pants down.
Good thing LongHorn is not out here!
EU, IMF clash over Greece revives debt crisis fears
5:24am EST
By Jan Strupczewski and Annika Breidthardt
BRUSSELS (Reuters) - A clash between Greece's international lenders over how the stricken country where the euro zone debt crisis began can bring its debts down to a sustainable level reignited fears on Tuesday that the crisis could flare up anew.
Euro zone finance ministers suggested that Athens should be given until 2022 to lower its debt/GDP ratio to 120 percent but International Monetary Fund chief Christine Lagarde insisted the existing target of 2020 should remain.
"We clearly have different views. What matters at the end of the day is the sustainability of Greek debt so that country can be back on its feet," Lagarde said late on Monday, in an unusually public airing of disagreement.
Behind her sharp exchange with Eurogroup chairman Jean-Claude Juncker lies a rift over whether euro zone governments need to write off some of Greece's debt to them to make it manageable. IMF officials have pressed for such a "haircut" while Germany, the biggest contributor to euro zone bailout funds, has vehemently rejected it as illegal.
German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble told reporters on Tuesday that the 2020 deadline was "a little too ambitious".
"There's a debate about a haircut for official creditors. On that I will say and most countries have said so in the past few weeks that that's legally not possible," he added.
Chancellor Angela Merkel has signaled she wants to keep Greece in the euro zone but is determined to avoid losses for German taxpayers before a general election in September 2013.
With so much stake, diplomats remain confident that a deal will be done to release a 31.5 billion euros tranche of bailout money which Athens urgently requires to avert bankruptcy.
But it is a way off yet.
MORE - http://www.reuters.com/article/2012/11/13/us-eurozone-greece-idUSBRE8AA0IV20121113?feedType=RSS&feedName=businessNews&utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+reuters%2FbusinessNews+%28Business+News%29
LOL, the run in your HOSE is the scariest one to think about. (Though I bet you look HOT!)
<mish>Misdiagnosing the Fiscal Cliff; Shrill Voices and Economic Nonsense; Tyranny of Balanced Budgets
The amount of worry over something that needs to happen is staggering.
I actually hope the fiscal cliff triggers. Better now than what is 100% certain to hit in a more severe way later.
Ideally, I would prefer no tax hikes and massive budget cuts. Senator Rand Paul's plan to balance the budget would have me jumping for joy.
The next best thing would be a small tax hikes in return for deep cuts in spending. However, Republicans foolishly killed that idea last summer, even rejecting plans that would cut spending over tax hikes in a ratio of 10-1.
Republicans refused that deal based on the foolish belief that Obama could not possibly win the election.
Well, Obama did win. And now, nearly everyone is screaming in shrill voices about a "fiscal cliff" that really could have and should have happened long ago.
Shrill Voices and Economic Nonsense
Heading up the list of shrill voices is none other than Ambrose Evans-Pritchard who writes World cannot afford second Fiscal Cliff after Europe’s failed attempt.
The story is by now well-known. Unless there is a deal in Congress by the end of the year, the Bush-era tax cuts and the payroll cuts will reverse automatically; extended jobless benefits for the long-term unemployed will be cut off; defence spending will be cut; so on. Everybody’s sacred cow is sacrificed. The combined austerity would be around $700bn over 2013, or 4.5pc of GDP.
The youth jobless rate is 58pc in Greece, 54.2pc in Spain, 35.1pc in Italy, and 25.7pc in France.
Labour economist and Nobel laureate Peter Diamond says the life trajectory of these young people will be damaged. There is almost nothing worse you can do to the productive potential of an economy - and therefore to debt ratios - than locking a great chunk of the future workforce out of the system during their formative years.
“They have a debt problem and an unemployment crisis, but they think it is the other way round,” he said.
The tragedy is that Europe is wasting its last chance to train a workforce for the 21st Century before its demographic crunch hits later this decade. EMU leaders - like the donkey generals of the trenches - are fighting the wrong war. They are crippling a generation. Budget deficits are coming down - though far less than assumed - but the skills deficit of the jobless army is going through the roof. It is the tyranny of the Maastricht Treaty.
It would be a double tragedy if the US succumbed debt fetishism and made the same historic misjudgement.
Tyranny of the Balanced Budget
Regular readers know that I have an on-again, off-again view of Ambrose Evans-Pritchard. When it comes to Keynesian clown economics, it is decidedly off.
If fiscal and monetary stimulus worked, Japan would not be facing its own fiscal cliff, with a debt-to-GDP ratio of 235 percent. If printing money worked, Zimbabwe would be the richest nation on earth.
The idea that balanced budgets will destroy the world is sheer idiocy. Indeed, any household in the US in severe economic straits would tell you (provided they were honest), that prolonged spending more money than they take in is the road to ruin.
But no! Pritchard not only rails against balanced budgets, he also rails against the "tyranny of the Maastricht Treaty" (the treaty that founded the eurozone), which allows for 3 percent deficit spending forever.
What 7th graders can easily understand (and what history has proven) is debt is the problem.
Pritchard, Bernanke, most of Congress, and most economists believe is the way out of a debt crisis is to spend more money.
Quite frankly, such policy is pure idiocy.
Fiscal Cliff Compromise
Liam Halligan, also from the Telegraph writes Compromise can save Obama from fiscal cliff.
In 2008, US government debt was 70pc of GDP. Now it is 102pc. The last time it was this high was in the aftermath of the Second World War. Back then, America was a nation in its zenith, about to embark on a population boom and a run of growth and rampant economic development. America today is an ageing society, weighed down with liabilities stretching years into the future.
For above and beyond the impending fiscal shenanigans, there is no sign whatsoever of any political agreement on how to reform old age benefits so as to prevent the derailment of Uncle Sam’s finances over the coming decades as tens of millions of baby boomers retire.
Some want Obama to use the political leverage he has gained from re-election to raise taxes and lock-in higher benefits. The real leverage the president has, in his second and final term, is that he doesn’t need to worry about re-election. That’s why Obama should offer the Republicans a deal to rein in the country’s ballooning entitlement spending before it spirals completely out of control. Only then will he give America the “hope” he so eloquently offered at the start of his presidency.
Political Chicken
Halligan presents an interesting opinion but I have to ask, where the H is there room for compromise?
Obama wants tax hikes, House speaker John Boehner does not want tax hikes but rather closing of loopholes. Is this fertile ground for compromise?
While pondering that question, please consider US plays chicken on edge of fiscal cliff by Rob Harding.
Chicken is not a complicated game. Only one thing can improve your chances of winning: sending a credible signal that you will not be the person to swerve from the collision.
Election over, the Republicans and Democrats are now revving up for the fiscal cliff, and the game is chicken. If there is no deal then everybody loses.
Let's stop right there because Harding is out of his mind. Someone is always a winner, at least in relative terms, and in politics, relative terms is what matters.
The only problem is figuring out who the relative winner is. Had Republicans realized Obama would win this election, they would have made a far different choice in last summer's budget negotiations.
Harding continues ...
If one side swerves then the other wins; and if both swerve – extending all current policy – then we come back next year and do it all again. In order to show that they will not swerve, politicians on both sides are publicly flirting with the idea of going over the cliff, at least temporarily.
If everybody knows how much damage this would do then the credibility of these threats is easy to assess. The danger comes, however, if people have different views of the cost, making their actions less predictable – and so far economists have not helped by sending out a mixed message.
Precisely. The real game of chicken is exactly the opposite of what Harding first suggested. The real game of chicken is neither party can figure out precisely who will benefit from the fiscal cliff.
If neither party can figure that out, they will both agree to kick the can down the road. This is what happened last summer. However, I doubt it will happen again to the same degree again.
President Obama cannot be elected for another term so he has nothing to lose by holding out.
On the other hand, Republicans may have something to lose (the mid-term elections two years from now).
If either side blinks, expect Republicans to blink first.
Don't Fear Fiscal Cliff
In regards to the game of chicken, Democrat senator Patty Murray, co-chair of last year’s deficit supercommittee says Don't Fear Fiscal Cliff
“If the Republicans will not agree with that, we will reach a point at the end of this year where all the tax cuts expire and we’ll start over next year,” said Patty Murray, who was co-chair of last year’s deficit supercommittee, on ABC’s This Week. “And whatever we do will be a tax cut for whatever package we put together. That may be the way to get past this.”
The Washington senator is one of the most senior figures from either party to suggest that temporarily going off the fiscal cliff could be an acceptable way to break the impasse over fiscal policy. Her hard line could strengthen the negotiating position of Democrats but frighten markets.
Going off the cliff would have the political advantage of letting Congress vote for tax cuts, after they go up automatically at the end of the year, rather than voting for tax rises now.
There's a interesting thought: Let the fiscal cliff happen, then pretend to cut taxes days later.
The problem once again (from a political perspective) is figuring out precisely who will benefit from alleged "reduced taxes" even though anyone with an eighth-ounce of common sense will realize taxes were not lowered.
Anatomy of the US Fiscal Cliff
Gavyn Davies writing for the Financial Times has interesting analysis and charts in his post Anatomy of the US Fiscal Cliff.
For starters, not the absolute absurdity of Republican protests over defense cuts.
The key item is in regards to the Bush tax cuts. The problem for those affected (me included) is the Republican leadership that negotiated these terms were arrogant fools thinking Obama had no chance of reelection.
Once again, please do not blame me. I did not vote for Obama. I was all in favor of Rand Paul's budget-balancing proposal that got hardly any votes.
Secondarily, I was in favor of a plan negotiated by Republican senator Tom Colburn as part of the "gang of six" bipartisan senators.
Sadly, those choices may now be off the table for four more years. In the meantime, please ponder this chart.
From that perspective, the fiscal cliff does not seem so bad. Consequences be damned because I will certainly be affected.
Once again, I am not in favor of tax hikes. However, (and unlike most hypocrites in Congress) I am not in favor of deficit spending either.
Options that Republicans had six months ago simply may not be there today. Don't blame the messenger for this sorry state of affairs.
Mike "Mish" Shedlock
http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com
Good morning EZ. Another day of dopey ass meetings today. My life is one big meeting. I think if I go to Hell, I will forever be in a meeting. AAAAAGGGHHHH!!!
A beautiful day out here today. Today is a RUN day, and I hate running, so I am dreading it. I did smoke a nice cigar, though.