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We Are Busted, But We Are Not Broken

Wednesday, February 25, 2009 | Teeka Tiwari

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Bank nationalization ... wow!  I mean, just ... wow.  It’s a sobering moment for all involved. 

I have no intention of minimizing the very real damage taking place across all income brackets the world over, but are we seeing anything we’ve never seen before?  No, I don’t think so.  The numbers are certainly magnified from previous bust times, but the core reasons for the break down are as old as time itself.

Which means it's fixable.  We will get through this.

Bank nationalization, while abhorrent to free market thinkers (and I count myself squarely in that camp), may be the only lasting solution.  The banks must stabilize their balance sheets.  The constant deterioration in the value of their assets vs. their liabilities is just occurring at too fast a rate for them to keep up.

For all intents and purposes, our major financial firms are nationalized already in all but name.  Unlike with other industries, a country cannot grow without a healthy banking system.  This crisis has robbed more money from our economy than any war ever could.  It is a direct threat to our national security and should be treated as such.

I’m not defending the idiots who created this mess.  Far from it.  To me, they are traitors to this good country and should suffer the same fate as all traitors.

After big busts like this, the banks typically re-liquify their balance sheets by borrowing cheap money from an accommodative Fed, and then lending at much higher long term rates.  There are a couple of problems with that old plan, though ...

Long term rates are LOW, LOW, LOW.  Far lower than in the last bank bust of 1991.  The spreads just aren’t as big as they used to be.

The other issue is that, as we came out of the recession of ’91, we did so going into a huge expansion period fueled by quantum leaps in technology, new drug development and productivity.  This created the demand for capital that the battered banks needed, and they were happy to lend it because they were making a killing on the spread between short term and long term rates.

This time is a little different. 

Where is this century's transformative technology?  By 2009, weren’t we all supposed to have flying cars and stasis chambers?  The pace of technological innovation has slowed.  The drug companies, once at the forefront of cutting edge science, have become lazy leviathans of process-driven inefficiency.

Where are the inventors?  The mad men of the 1970’s, ’80 AND ‘90’S.  Where are the Wozniaks, the Steve Jobs, the Michael Dells of this new century?  It’s people like these who move our country forward.  And Bill Gates, (love him or hate him) -- the fact is his software tools have helped hundreds of millions of people to be more productive.

It almost feels like we are experiencing an “Atlas Shrugged” moment in our country, where all the producers -- the "do’ers" of the world -- have fled. 

But here is the beauty of America: we are a self correcting society.  We are a nation of people who are unafraid of change.

Whether you support Obama or not, it’s pretty darn cool that a country that once embraced slavery and apartheid could move beyond that history and elect an African American President.  When was the last time Germany, France or England had a black leader?  Cue crickets ...

So forget the finger pointing from the Europeans.  Like any jealous rival, they take a curious pleasure in seeing us stumble.

But a stumble is not a fall.  Yes, we have more pain to come; there is no question.  The bad real estate loans still haven’t been thoroughly purged from the system.  There are millions more foreclosures still waiting to occur.  Corporate earnings will still continue to be garbage for the foreseeable future, and the headlines will continue to get worse.

Don’t confuse a bust with a break.  Yes, for the time being we are busted, but we are not broken!

The point of today’s article is to impress upon you that you can still make money, even in times as dire as this.  Don’t let the media brow beat you into thinking that the U.S. is finished.  There will continue to be opportunities to trade market volatility both on the long and the short side.

I strongly urge you to read as many of Chris Rowe’s articles as you can.  This is a guy with his finger on the pulse of this market!  What he gives away for free in The Tycoon Report is staggering.  Educate yourself.  Get some knowledge.  And The Tycoon Report can help.  It’s loaded with tons of free investing articles from Wall Street professionals.

You need to start taking the reins, because I can assure you that 99 out of 100 so-called professionals are simply unequipped to help you navigate these times.  We at Tycoon are here to help you.  We are not always going to get it right, but you can always count on getting our very best thinking in a clear and easily understood format.

All of us at Tycoon were once where you are.  On the outside looking in, trying to fathom this great game called Wall Street.  We’ve spent our entire adult lives engaged in the pursuit of market knowledge, and because we understand what it’s like to be an outsider, we are happy to share that knowledge with you.



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Teeka Tiwari
Chief Investment Officer
ETF Master Trader


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12 Comments

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  1. Mick (1 year ago) Is this Spam?

    OUtstanding and needed at a time like this. Only, sadly I have lost my life savings and investments and now am umemployed. Need to get roling again and creative enough to create my own job. Any helpful hints are appreciated although I am on my own. TY
  2. DAVID (1 year ago) Is this Spam?

    From: DAVID SCHNEIDER < >

    Subject:

    Teeka info vs Chris info?

    I noticed on todays newsletter REIT HOTEL/MOTEL heads your list as BEST SECTOR %. Yet yesterday Chris said Leisure was a "bearish bet."



    This seems inconsistant to me, a complete novice ( so far ) at this. Is cheap property prices driving the REIT $$? What am I missing?

    David Schneider
  3. Chris R (1 year ago) Is this Spam?

    Alexander H, CHRIS ROWE HERE

    I do appreciate the fact that you excluded me from the comment you left. Flattered, really.

    However, for someone who doesn't like the tycoon report, you sure do leave a lot of comments on a great many of our articles. I can't help but to assume you have ill feelings toward us for some other reason. You bring up one bad call constantly. That just strikes me as odd. If you're an investor in the market, you know that it's about making more good calls than bad calls and managing the process. So why try to rip Tycoon for saying Citibank was a good call? Especially after so many of our good calls worked out so well? In fact, most of the time, we are spot on.

    So I invite you to contact me to talk about this - as I know you know how to get in touch with me. There has got to be a reason, other than a call on Citibank in 2007 - and my assumption really is giving you the benefit of the doubt as to what kind of person you are. You had gathered that you are a bright guy who understands the market. That's why you get the benefit of the doubt. Because I feel that I would be insulting your intelligence if I were to believe that you're problem with us is what you are writing it is. Its not a good look for you Alex. I have respect for you. I'm just saying.

    Chris
  4. Edward (1 year ago) Is this Spam?

    Where were you 12 months ago? Hindsight is perfect buy also useless!
  5. paul (1 year ago) Is this Spam?

    Teeka,

    I respectfully disagree. The system is broken and Michael O and Bill have it right. The chickens have finally come home to roost. Amerika will be unrecognizable in 10 years. Socialism in a diverse society has never worked and our intellectual property will leave. America will be back in the future. Unfortunately it will be a long and painful process. I hope I am wrong.
  6. Larry (1 year ago) Is this Spam?

    Thanks, Teek for the encouragement and insight.



    LB from Pa
  7. Alexander H (1 year ago) Is this Spam?

    This is really funny. It must be a Wall Street disease to never question the current monetary system which has simply failed. Like Bretton Woods I failed as well.



    How are you going to re-inflate this bubble? It will not work.



    Austrian economics has always predicted this and will be right again.



    Good look wasting your time going on talking about the symptoms.



    A lot of Tycoon Report articles (exception Chris Rowe) have lost a lot of quality. Beginners, who are not familiar with the different economic schools might be impressed by these types of articles. I am not.



    The Tycoon Report has become a serious waste of time.



    By the way, how many of your readers still have Citigroup in their portfolios? Things will get better if you wait long enough? Hell yeah...!



    I am out of here.
  8. David (1 year ago) Is this Spam?

    Do not underestimate the ability of the human spirit to innovate, thrive and survive especially in times of hardship.

    My portfolio covers 38 stocks some of which could be riskier than the average investor would ordinarily consider. But my 2008 p/e is 3.77 and forward forcasts are 1.67 for 2009 and 1.01 for 2010. Even if these estimates get pushed out another year it still means that my porfolio has a 2011 p/e of 1.01 and a current p/bk of .15 and PEG of .23 so you cam not tell me that there is not value in the current market.

    Perhaps it is time to believe the Fed and administration and start rebuilding investment portfolios.

    And yes even now there are stocks that appear to me to be overvalued but since shorting is a trading activity and I am an investor I will leave it up to someone else to identify them because if the market does indeed rally as it should it would be difficult for them to fall in value and as an investor I would rather take risk on the growth side than trade.

    Good luck and good hunting. Go sector hunter.
  9. john (1 year ago) Is this Spam?

    I see the country has reached a plateau. The old systems that were in place and working 15 years ago, will not lead us above this level. If the government is the one that knows what's best for us, then the free thinkers and creative persons will stay in hiding. University's may may have great stuff in the pipeline, but it takes creativity to bring these new ideas to market, and yes there has to be profit.

    Nothing against the new President, the incentives needed to move us forwrd are not being put forth. Consumerism will not move us forward, and that is the fire they seem to be wanting to light. Consumerism was the last phase of the great bull market from 1982. It will not lead us out of the bear.

    We as citizens will have to be patient with our leaders, for until they see the light we will be treading water. I am critical, but I offer a positive idea. Because wages in this country are not competitive world wide, allow any business that builds a manufacturing facility in this country to operate that factory free of Federal taxes. And the states could offer deals with small land taxes to business. If we begin to build things we need and the world needs we can begin to create an advanced manufacturing base.

    This type of thinking cuts against the grain of those in power now.
  10. Roy (1 year ago) Is this Spam?

    Teeka,



    America still produces technological magic. Check out MIT's Technology Review (http://www.technologyreview.com/). If you subscribe to their daily Emerging Technology newsletter you will see a steady stream of mind-boggling innovation. There is amazing stuff in the pipeline.

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