Tag: money

Where’s the Outrage?

Posted by Sam Bragg on October 26, 2009 | No comments

I’m becoming increasingly concerned that the remarkable rally we have seen over the past 6 months is nothing but hot air.  I’m done with bailouts and government spending.  I’m tired of the political incompetence we have seen from both Democrats and Republicans for as long as I have been voting.  I hope we do not fall into the trap of apathy that will certainly result in the decline of our nation.  Americans need to know what’s going on, talk about what’s going on, and figure out how to fix this.

Below is an excerpt from a Mish’s Global Economic Trend Analysis article that I read this weekend.  You need to read the whole article to fully understand what is going on, but here is Mish’s take at the end of the article:

Where’s The Outrage?

I don’t know about you, but I am outraged.

I am outraged and not just about Goldman Sachs, but about a process that allows, even encourages political pandering, by time and time again rewarding leveraged riverboat gamblers and failed institutions and at taxpayer expense.

I am outraged that real people are suffering massively while the influence peddlers have stolen the country for their own personal benefit.

I am outraged at a political system that is totally unresponsive to the American people.

I am outraged by campaign contribution and lobbying processes that allows corporations to buy votes with donations.

I am outraged how legislators ignored the wishes of the people who clearly did not want these bailouts in the first place.

I am outraged that very little of this is in mainstream media. Why is this stuff not on the frontpage of every newspaper in the country or at least in the editorial pages?

I am outraged that the average US citizen is not aware of any of this, instead depending on CNBC, or “The View” for their interpretation of the world.

I am outraged how special interest groups have exercised their power to monopolize the economy for the benefit of themselves, US citizens be damned.

I am outraged that all these bailout programs are doing nothing to alleviate the massive consumer debt problems. Every program, virtually every program was designed to bailout lending institutions, not consumers.

I am outraged at fees charged by banks receiving bailouts.

I am outraged over government pension plans and government pay scales massively out of line with the private sector.

I am outraged that Congress and this administration thinks the solution to massive budget deficits are still higher budget deficits in excess of a trillion dollars.

I am outraged about indictments. Paulson Admitted Coercion to force a shotgun wedding between Bank of America and Merrill Lynch yet no indictments were handed out. Let the Criminal Indictments Begin: Paulson, Bernanke, Lewis.

I am outraged that US citizens are not concerned enough and not educated enough to demand change.

I am outraged that the two party system has failed. Neither party has delivered meaningful change on budgets, on taxes, on social security, on deficit spending, on the size of government, on military spending, or fighting needless wars.

I am outraged at a Fed that purports to be “inflation fighters” when the only source of inflation in the word are central bankers, and their fractional reserve lending policies.

I am outraged that Greenspan and Bernanke could not see a housing bubble that 1000 bloggers could see.

I am outraged at the selective memory of Bernanke when speaking to Congress about these problems.

I am outraged that Bernanke’s one sided response to asset bubbles, letting them grow without end, then bailing out the financial institutions that cause them.

I am outraged the Fed exists at all. It is a useless organization that cannot see bubbles, that panders to banks, that supports inflationary policies that are tantamount to theft by fraud.

I am outraged that the Obama Administration promised changed and did not deliver. “Yes We Can” was a lie. The reality is “It’s Business As Usual, Only Worse, With Higher Deficits”.

I am outraged there is not enough outrage over this.

Where the hell is the outrage?

Mike “Mish” Shedlock
http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com

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Watching UNG

Posted by Sam Bragg on October 13, 2009 | No comments

UNG has taken quite a ride the past few months.  Supply just really beat it down, but I think long term this is a great time to buy despite the recent rebound.  I recently read this analysis by Chris Vermeulen on Seeking Alpha:

Natural gas has really come back to life. I mentioned on September 2nd that natural gas (UNG) looked like a buy between $9 – $9.50 and it has now rallied 25% since that point. But stepping back and looking at the chart we can see resistance is hovering overhead between the $12 – $12.25.

I may send out a setup for a short play if we get one but I feel the heavy sell off in August was the final wave down, flushing out traders. Speculative traders seem to have moved into natural gas and I think they will continue to buy it for some time. Pullbacks will be sharp but most likely followed with more buying as we enter the cooler months of the year.

I’ve heard it is supposed to be a mild winter, but how they predict something like that is beyond me.  Regardless of the weather this year, I like this as a long term investment.

My covestor profile is tracking my Roth IRA, which is focused on dividends, but I have shares of UNG in my regular investment account.  I may end up creating another profile to track that account.

Here’s another great article on Seeking Alpha about Canada’s energy resources: http://seekingalpha.com/article/165856-o-canada-part-iii-black-gold-natural-gas-and-growing-dividends-too?source=article_sb_popular

Enjoy!

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Check out SeekingAlpha.com

Posted by Sam Bragg on September 21, 2009 | One comment

One of my favorite web sites for market analysis is www.seekingalpha.com.  First of all, the content is free, and that is a pre-requisite for me!  But honestly, they have really good analysis on almost everything I have looked at investing in and new articles are posted regularly.  Most of the mainstream finance sites…yahoo, CNN, MSN, bloomberg, [insert media conglomerate here]… are like lemmings when it comes to market analysis.  One week they are all saying “the sky is falling” and the next week the mantra changes and they all fall in line.  I’m really over those sources for analysis other than to know what sentiment they are pushing that day.  For real substance, this site provides plenty of food for thought.

No matter what you like to invest in, Seeking Alpha provides easy to find information.  I really like the way they break up the site.  Features are posted on the Home page. The Macro View is perfect for getting a variety of views on the current trends in the overall economy and staying in touch with economic reports.  Stocks & Sectors breaks articles down into a handful of focused areas…I tend to focus on the Energy sector.  Then there’s Global Markets, ETFs (I spend a bit of time here also), and Investing Ideas.  It works for new and experienced investors.

I like to look for swings in oil and natural gas, and try to buy undervalued funds or companies.  Right now there is a feature article at Seeking Alpha about such a company, China Natural Gas.  Here’s a link to the article: http://seekingalpha.com/article/162508-china-natural-gas-deeply-undervalued.  I wouldn’t buy something based on one article, but it did peak my curiosity.

Happy Trading!

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