Humana Warns Of “Adverse Obamacare Enrollment Mix”

Submitted by Michael Krieger of Liberty Blitzkrieg blog,

Thought the incredibly unpopular Obamacare health plan (the most epic disaster story was the woman who was touted as a success and then later kicked off her plan) had put most of its problems behind it? Think again. Yesterday, after the stock market close, health insurer Humana warned that the “risk mix” of those who have signed up for the program will be “more adverse than previously expected.”

In plain english what this means is that only old and sick people are signing up, while younger generations with piles of student debt, a couch in their parents’ basements and no jobs decide to ride things out uninsured.

Honestly, I can’t blame them, as I just received my own 12% rate hike the other day. Happy New Year to you too Barry.

From Investor’s Business Daily:

Humana said the “risk mix” of its ObamaCare exchange members will be “more adverse than previously expected,” the latest evidence that the health reform is attracting older, sicker Americans than originally projected.

 

The health insurer, in an SEC filing late Thursday, cited the Obama administration’s 11th hour decision to let people stay on plans that had been cancelled due to ObamaCare regulations. The White House was reacting to political anger of President Obama’s “if you like your plan, you can keep it” vow.

 

Humana made no mention of the administration’s late December decision to let people with cancelled plans avoid the individual mandate tax penalty in 2014. Those who choose to forgo insurance presumably will be younger and healthier.

 

The White House has refused to give any information regarding the age or health status of people signing up on the federal healthcare.gov site. Data from some state-run exchanges have suggested fewer “young invincibles” are signing up.

 

The ObamaCare exchanges need young, healthy people to make up a significant share of enrollees. If not, the plans may be more costly for insurers, potentially creating a premium rate death spiral. But the Obama administration plans to use “risk-corridor” and “risk-adjustment” payments to offset much of insurance companies’ unexpectedly high costs. Such taxpayer bailouts may keep insurers from hiking premiums in 2015 or simply bowing out of the exchanges.

“Premium rate death death spiral.” Call me crazy, but I’m not itching to find out what that means…

Full article here.


    



via Zero Hedge http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/zerohedge/feed/~3/EiIAu4q134A/story01.htm Tyler Durden

Humana Warns Of "Adverse Obamacare Enrollment Mix"

Submitted by Michael Krieger of Liberty Blitzkrieg blog,

Thought the incredibly unpopular Obamacare health plan (the most epic disaster story was the woman who was touted as a success and then later kicked off her plan) had put most of its problems behind it? Think again. Yesterday, after the stock market close, health insurer Humana warned that the “risk mix” of those who have signed up for the program will be “more adverse than previously expected.”

In plain english what this means is that only old and sick people are signing up, while younger generations with piles of student debt, a couch in their parents’ basements and no jobs decide to ride things out uninsured.

Honestly, I can’t blame them, as I just received my own 12% rate hike the other day. Happy New Year to you too Barry.

From Investor’s Business Daily:

Humana said the “risk mix” of its ObamaCare exchange members will be “more adverse than previously expected,” the latest evidence that the health reform is attracting older, sicker Americans than originally projected.

 

The health insurer, in an SEC filing late Thursday, cited the Obama administration’s 11th hour decision to let people stay on plans that had been cancelled due to ObamaCare regulations. The White House was reacting to political anger of President Obama’s “if you like your plan, you can keep it” vow.

 

Humana made no mention of the administration’s late December decision to let people with cancelled plans avoid the individual mandate tax penalty in 2014. Those who choose to forgo insurance presumably will be younger and healthier.

 

The White House has refused to give any information regarding the age or health status of people signing up on the federal healthcare.gov site. Data from some state-run exchanges have suggested fewer “young invincibles” are signing up.

 

The ObamaCare exchanges need young, healthy people to make up a significant share of enrollees. If not, the plans may be more costly for insurers, potentially creating a premium rate death spiral. But the Obama administration plans to use “risk-corridor” and “risk-adjustment” payments to offset much of insurance companies’ unexpectedly high costs. Such taxpayer bailouts may keep insurers from hiking premiums in 2015 or simply bowing out of the exchanges.

“Premium rate death death spiral.” Call me crazy, but I’m not itching to find out what that means…

Full article here.


    



via Zero Hedge http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/zerohedge/feed/~3/EiIAu4q134A/story01.htm Tyler Durden

A Year Ago Today We Lost Aaron Swartz – R.I.P.

Exactly one year ago today, the world lost a kind, brilliant and courageous human being. Aaron Swartz, who had already accomplished so much in his short time with us, was driven to suicide by an out of control, unenlightened and increasingly fascistic government, determined to prosecute this gentle genius.

In remembrance of Aarron, I am reposting in full, the post I wrote about him and his story shortly after his death one year ago titled: Remembering Internet Prodigy and Activist Aaron Swartz (1986-2013): Your Life is an Inspiration.

Rest in Peace.

Remembering Internet Prodigy and Activist Aaron Swartz (1986-2013): Your Life is an Inspiration

It takes a person like Aaron Swartz to remind you how little you are actually doing to bring forth social, political and economic justice in this increasingly insane and sick world.  I’m not exaggerating when I say his life was an inspiration.   At 14 years old he helped start the RSS feed system, which so many now use to read content online.  He also co-founded Reddit, and its sale to Conde Nast is what afforded him the resources to dedicate his life to the defense of a free and open internet.  His most remarkable success in this regard was the creation of the organization Demand Progress, which was instrumental in defeating the internet censorship bill know as SOPA (the Stop Online Piracy Act).

He ran afoul of the law due to his actions in the fall of 2010 when he downloaded millions of academic journal articles from the nonprofit online database JSTOR.  While JSTOR could have pursued charges against Aaron for his activities, they decided against it.  However, our Federal Government was not so kind.  They decided to make an example of Aaron and charged him with multiple felonies.  Charges that carried up to 35 years in prison and $1 million in fines.  Aaron was found dead in his Brooklyn apartment this past Friday, in an apparent suicide.

If you had asked me about Aaron Swartz three days ago I could have told you none of the above.  This is despite the fact that I now spend pretty much all of my time trying to read through news and understand the true nature of the world around me.  Even more pathetically, it is despite the fact that a close friend of mine had met Aaron this past summer and was trying to coordinate a time for us all to meet.  Sadly, we never connected.

As part of my tribute to Aaron, I will commit myself even more fully to the cause of freedom in America.  I spent the last 12 hours reading about him and I have compiled some of the most interesting excerpts from various sources below.  Please take the time.

First from the official statement from his family and partner:

Aaron’s death is not simply a personal tragedy. It is the product of a criminal justice system rife with intimidation and prosecutorial overreach.Decisions made by officials in the Massachusetts U.S. Attorney’s office and at MIT contributed to his death. The US Attorney’s office pursued an exceptionally harsh array of charges, carrying potentially over 30 years in prison, to punish an alleged crime that had no victims. Meanwhile, unlike JSTOR, MIT refused to stand up for Aaron and its own community’s most cherished principles.

Next from Lawrence Lessig, the director of the Edmond J. Safra Center for Ethics at Harvard University and the Roy L. Furman Professor of Law at Harvard Law School and friend of Aaron.  He writes:

Early on, and to its great credit, JSTOR figured “appropriate” out: They declined to pursue their own action against Aaron, and they asked the government to drop its. MIT, to its great shame, was not as clear, and so the prosecutor had the excuse he needed to continue his war against the “criminal” who we who loved him knew as Aaron.

From the beginning, the government worked as hard as it could to characterize what Aaron did in the most extreme and absurd way. The “property” Aaron had “stolen,” we were told, was worth “millions of dollars” — with the hint, and then the suggestion, that his aim must have been to profit from his crime. But anyone who says that there is money to be made in a stash of ACADEMIC ARTICLES is either an idiot or a liar. It was clear what this was not, yet our government continued to push as if it had caught the 9/11 terrorists red-handed.

I get wrong. But I also get proportionality. And if you don’t get both, you don’t deserve to have the power of the United States government behind you.

For remember, we live in a world where the architects of the financial crisis regularly dine at the White House — and where even those brought to “justice” never even have to admit any wrongdoing, let alone be labeled “felons.”

From the Huffington Post:

Swartz spent the last two years fighting federal hacking charges. In July 2011, prosecutor Scott Garland working under U.S. Attorney Carmen Ortiz, a politician with her eye on the governor’s mansion, charged Swartz with four counts of felony misconduct — charges that were deemed outrageous by internet experts who understood the case, and wholly unnecessary by the parties Swartz was accused of wronging.

Swartz repeatedly sought to reduce the charges to a level below felony status, but prosecutors pressed on, adding additional charges so that by September 2012 Swartz faced 13 felony counts and up to half a century in prison.

Swartz’s friend Henry Farrell, a political scientist at George Washington University, also pointed at the DOJ. “They sought felony convictions with decades of prison time for actions which, if they were illegal at all, were at most misdemeanors.”

Had JSTOR wanted to pursue civil charges against Swartz for breach of contract, it could have. But JSTOR did not, and washed its hands of the whole affair.

Last June, Swartz told HuffPost that both JSTOR and MIT had advised prosecutors they were not interested in pursuing criminal or civil charges.

But the government pressed on, interpreting Swartz’s actions as a federal crime, alleging mass theft, damaged computers and wire fraud, and suggesting that Swartz stood to gain financially.

JSTOR issued a statement late on Saturday expressing regret at Swartz’s passing, criticizing his prosecution.

“The case is one that we ourselves had regretted being drawn into from the outset, since JSTOR’s mission is to foster widespread access to the world’s body of scholarly knowledge,” the statement reads. “At the same time, as one of the largest archives of scholarly literature in the world, we must be careful stewards of the information entrusted to us by the owners and creators of that content. To that end, Aaron returned the data he had in his possession and JSTOR settled any civil claims we might have had against him in June 2011.”

From Glenn Greenwald at the Guardian:

continue reading

from A Lightning War for Liberty http://libertyblitzkrieg.com/2014/01/11/a-year-ago-today-we-lost-aaron-swartz-r-i-p/
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5 Stocks Due For A Pullback In 2014

By EconMatters


Beware of Bubbles & Market Valuations in QE Sloshfest


There have been several reports of money managers returning funds to investors because of a lack of attractively valued investment opportunities in the markets. This is actually very responsible and quite prudent from a fiduciary standpoint where most fund managers are so concerned about raising assets under management that they sacrifice the fund`s long term viability by investing at inopportune times, i.e., investing in assets at historically rich prices relative to the underlying fundamentals of the business. 

QE has definitely distorted many asset prices to the upside, and with it finally ending this summer, fund managers are weary of buying at these levels without a guaranteed catalyst to replace the Fed`s monthly liquidity injections, and the global economy will really need to be humming along to replace $85 Billion of Fed injections via asset purchases.

 

Thus, the takeaway is that many assets are overvalued when it comes to stock prices but we will focus on 5 candidates that we think are going to have a tougher time justifying their lofty stock prices due to a myriad of factors other than the taking away of the QE punchbowl.

 


We will start with Twitter, Inc. (TWTR) which opened its IPO around $45 a share, traded between $40 and $45 a share for several weeks and then took off with the Santa Claus December Annual Rally to $73 a share. It is currently trading around $69 a share.

 

All the valuation metrics are going to look bad with this stock from EPS to Operating Margin and EBITDA, as the story for Twitter will be one of a growth stock so none of these valuations matter in the short term. This is the bullish case for the stock, and it makes for a great investment theme if you can sell the story that normal valuation metrics don`t matter, it creates the environment that many a momentum stock feeds off of from a frenzy standpoint.

 

However, the first and second earning`s reports for Twitter in 2014 are going to bring home the reality to investors that there is a difference between a great product used by the media and various celebrities for marketing purposes, and a revenue generating model that justifies a $38 Billion Market Cap.

 

 

The next bearish catalyst is the ending of the Lock-up Period, and as these probation periods from selling shares on the market expire, expect a lot more shares being added to the trading float trying to capitalize on the current lofty stock price in an overall bull market to secure their Payday for these initial investors in the company a la Facebook.

 

Once key technical support levels break and automated selling programs kick in this just adds more downside fuel to the fire as investors get nervous and reevaluate their “Greed Factor” and some large initial investors who were originally thinking in terms of holding out for becoming Billionaires, start to reevaluate and settle for becoming Multi-Millionaires, thus dumping additional shares onto an already saturated market.

 

Just like in Facebook, Inc. (FB) once the earning`s reality and the share unlocking takes place the Twitter stock will enter a defined downtrend, let the stock find a bottom before venturing to enter from the long side for what may provide a value proposition at some price.

 

But time will tell exactly what price constitutes value in this name, so investors will have to continually monitor earning`s results, the overall space that Twitter operates in, along with both the overall market and global economy.

 

But one thing is sure Twitter with a current Market Cap of $38 Billion, with it not actually being a profitable company by many financial metrics, is quite an expensive stock and due for a price realignment with a healthy dose of market reality reinforced by actual earning`s results in 2014.

 

Amazon


Amazon.com Inc. (AMZN) is the next candidate ripe for a pullback in 2014, it has had a nice run the last five years and the actual trading float is really small as much of the available float is in the hands of long term investors in the company.

 

However, with QE Infinity finally looking to come to an end which has definitely benefited this stock as much as any over the last five years, these long term investors may finally start locking in these gains and secure this wealth by diversifying into more capital preservation type investments.

Especially since Amazon has gotten a relative pass on earnings over the last five years due to growing the company and gaining market share, at some point the company has to start producing larger profits than 0.28 earnings per share to justify a 1400 P/E ratio.

 

 

Our thesis on the stock is that Amazon finally starts to get punished for poor earnings in 2014 and in combination with the lofty stock appreciation over the last five years buttressed by a multitude of QE initiatives that capital gains finally get locked in at these levels in the stock.

 

Similarly to how the major Apple run to $700 a share ended very abruptly with a six month and $300 haircut in the stock, once the downturn in investor sentiment occurs, and the downtrend gains speed, losses become self-fulfilling for investors, leading to additional selling, and given how far this stock has come in recent years there is no real support until the $240 a share level.

 

Consequently if the downtrend takes hold in 2014 the pullback could be quite severe for investors trying to hold through the weakness in the stock. Sort of like David Einhorn and Greenlight Capital`s approach to their Apple position, they would have been much better off by selling at $700 a share, and buying back in after the collapse at around $400 a share.

 

Amazon is a good company with a bright future, but from a valuation standpoint it is due for a major pullback in 2014. Any investors already in the name need to take profits ASAP, and new investors should avoid trying to pick a bottom too soon, Amazon has a lot of hot air in its stock price, and once the key technical levels of support fail, look out below!

 

Tesla


Tesla Motors, Inc. (TSLA) is our third stock candidate setting up investors for a sour 2014 campaign. The stock is the ebullient highs of around $195 a share, trading currently around the $150 a share level and we expect the stock to fall below the $100 a share level some time in 2014; whether that area represents a good buying opportunity for investors is an entirely different matter.

 

But some of the headwinds for 2014 are going to be stiff earning`s comps for 2013 where environmental credits made earnings look a whole lot better than they actually were given the lofty stock price. With the dismal automobile numbers for December being recently released it appears that many people who needed to upgrade their vehicles have already done so in 2013, and this was one of our concerns with GM as a possible headwind. Furthermore, given Ford`s downbeat profit forecast in 2014, December`s automobile numbers, and the rise in interest rates 2014 seems to be setting up for disappointment in the automakers, and yes that includes the electric car manufacturers as well.

 

 

We also think 2014 is finally the year that oil prices retreat with more supply coming on line than a slightly improving economy can utilize from a demand perspective that gasoline prices stay low relative to the peaks of the last four years, thus further dis-incentivizing the electric over fossil fuel economic switch by consumers. With the US Domestic oil resurgence, North American increased output and Iraq, Libya, and Iran all producing more oil globally in 2014 we expect oil to be under considerable price pressure which ultimately reflects itself in downward pressure on alternative energy plays like TSLA.

 

Finally there is just the valuation of the stock, it can even be a great company with a long term bright future eventually, but the actual quarterly and annual automobiles that Tesla produces just doesn’t equate with a $19 Billion Market Cap with negative Earnings per Share, negative Operating Margin, negative Net Income and negative EBITDA. Plain and simple the stock is vastly over valued at current levels of automobile production based on company costs versus profits from an investment standpoint. Investors should not even begin to look at Tesla Motors, Inc. from a long standpoint until it drops below $100 a share.

 

Priceline


The fourth candidate due for a pullback in 2014 is priceline.com Incorporated (PCLN) which has had quite a run, more than doubling in 2013 alone, you think there isn`t a lot of liquidity out there in markets!

 

Priceline started 2013 at around $650 a share and reached a high of close to 1,200 a share in the fourth quarter before retreating to trading currently at the 1,130 level. You think some investors might want to take some profits in this name? You better believe it, the stock already looks to be rolling over and this stock is going to ramp up speed on the downtrend. It is a no brainer that Priceline falls below $950 a share in 2014; it is just a matter of how fast!

 

The price to the upside was fueled by the small float, low daily active trading volume, and lofty price so momentum to the long side just sort of snowballed, self-reinforcing the stock to excessive margin expansion in 2013.

 

 

With a $60 Billion Market Cap, and Gross Margin of 0.83 with Operating Margin of 0.36 and a P/E of 32.68 Priceline is one of the ‘uber-pricey’ names in the investing world and vastly over-valued when compared to solid companies like Apple Inc. (AAPL) with a P/E of 13.61 and Exxon Mobil Corporation (XOM) with a P/E of 13.00.

 

And arguments can be made for both of these solid companies to pullback in 2014 once stocks readjust to life without the Federal Reserve pumping $85 Billion worth of liquidity in the financial markets each month, i.e., Exxon Mobil Corporation is right at all-time highs for a company that has been around long enough for my grandfather to have invested in it!

 

This does not bode well for Priceline investors; get out while you still can because the drop is going to be brutal in this name for 2014. Moreover, investors in this stock, who have any historical reference, will remember the magnitude of the crash that this stock has undertaken in the past once the selling begins in earnest. For investors unfamiliar with the potential declines in this stock check the 1999 – 2000 time period charts.

 

I point this out to any bottom pickers, just stay away from this stock in 2014 the downside risk is too great for any potential upside gains, there is so much liquidity air in Priceline that there are going to be absolutely gut wrenching down days in 2014.

 

Netflix


The final stock due for a pullback in 2014 is Netflix, Inc. (NFLX) which is a great company, and has done wonders for the space, but valuations are just too rich considering the actual fundamentals of the business.

 

We have been Netflix, Inc. subscribers for years, and although we keep the product we recognize the limitations of limited selection choices compared to other online outlets, outdated series to binge upon, and more interesting live opportunities with competitive media viewing choices. My online media viewing world would be much more negatively affected if I suddenly lost YouTube access as opposed to our Netflix, Inc. subscription.

 

 

However, the real issue with Netflix is the valuation of the stock, and how much good news is already priced in the stock. Netflix received a great lift in 2013 when the original programming of House of Cards really boosted the stock, but the problem is that with binge viewing and no commercials, it only takes a weekend to knock out an entire season, and then the rest of the year is spent searching for decent content to watch. It still takes forever for the latest releases to actually hit Netflix streaming!

 

The stock more than tripled in 2013, going from around $100 a share to a high of $389 a share. The stock is currently trading at $363 a share with a Market Cap of $21 Billion, Earnings per Share of1.20, and a P/E of 303.85. Netflix is not a cheap investment, and frankly with the ever-changing landscape of online media who knows if the company will even exist in five years!

 

The problem is that with momentum stocks like Netflix, once a downside catalyst emerges, the bloom comes off the rose real quick as investors bail at record pace and all seemingly at the same time. Just look what happened to the stock when Reed Hastings raised subscriptions fees and made customers angry in the process, it went from $300 a share to $55 a share rather quickly.

 

It is no secret from an operational standpoint that Netflix is going to have to raise subscription revenue from existing customers, and at what price do customers just drop the service? We have it and frankly we can take it or leave it: the service offerings versus other viewing alternatives are probably below average even among free viewing options, and we are in the higher income bracket.

The point is that Netflix is spending a lot of money to offer what little quality content they have right now, and they will need to spend more to keep up with consumer`s demands, and from an operational standpoint does the financial math even add up – is this a “destined broke” business model long-term? Can they ever bring in enough subscription revenue to balance out the soaring content costs and escalating requirements for additional new content and not alienate their customer base in the process?

 

This is my real concern for the stock long-term aside from the 2014 valuation concerns. We don`t think the risk versus reward justifies any long position in the stock at these current price levels, and we expect a rather precipitous drop for the stock sometime during 2014.

 

If I had to bet on a catalyst it probably comes down to a series of relatively disappointing earnings reports in the wake of an increased volatility period inspired by lack of QE Liquidity in the market. Moreover, expect the drop to be significant, we expect at least a $100 a share price drop from current levels in the stock for 2014.

 

Final Thoughts


So now you have our five stock candidates ripe for a pullback in 2014. Be careful with these investment vehicles when trying to pick a bottom, just as they rose to tremendous heights with seemingly little effort, remember that margin debt has been at record levels for 2013, QE Infinity is finally being wound down, and interest rates are rising on cheap money both from a stock buybacks perspective, and an overall borrowing standpoint for the investing universe.

 

In short, these names can fall farther than investors ever think once the downside momentum kicks in, with existing buyers selling, newly added shorts coming to the table, and losses begetting additional losses. In the modern era of investing, market timing is just as important as picking the right companies to invest in, and 2014 will not be a good year for investors in these five companies.

 

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via Zero Hedge http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/zerohedge/feed/~3/bytnfx9oumI/story01.htm EconMatters

5 Stocks Due For A Pullback In 2014

By EconMatters


Beware of Bubbles & Market Valuations in QE Sloshfest


There have been several reports of money managers returning funds to investors because of a lack of attractively valued investment opportunities in the markets. This is actually very responsible and quite prudent from a fiduciary standpoint where most fund managers are so concerned about raising assets under management that they sacrifice the fund`s long term viability by investing at inopportune times, i.e., investing in assets at historically rich prices relative to the underlying fundamentals of the business. 

QE has definitely distorted many asset prices to the upside, and with it finally ending this summer, fund managers are weary of buying at these levels without a guaranteed catalyst to replace the Fed`s monthly liquidity injections, and the global economy will really need to be humming along to replace $85 Billion of Fed injections via asset purchases.

 

Thus, the takeaway is that many assets are overvalued when it comes to stock prices but we will focus on 5 candidates that we think are going to have a tougher time justifying their lofty stock prices due to a myriad of factors other than the taking away of the QE punchbowl.

 


We will start with Twitter, Inc. (TWTR) which opened its IPO around $45 a share, traded between $40 and $45 a share for several weeks and then took off with the Santa Claus December Annual Rally to $73 a share. It is currently trading around $69 a share.

 

All the valuation metrics are going to look bad with this stock from EPS to Operating Margin and EBITDA, as the story for Twitter will be one of a growth stock so none of these valuations matter in the short term. This is the bullish case for the stock, and it makes for a great investment theme if you can sell the story that normal valuation metrics don`t matter, it creates the environment that many a momentum stock feeds off of from a frenzy standpoint.

 

However, the first and second earning`s reports for Twitter in 2014 are going to bring home the reality to investors that there is a difference between a great product used by the media and various celebrities for marketing purposes, and a revenue generating model that justifies a $38 Billion Market Cap.

 

 

The next bearish catalyst is the ending of the Lock-up Period, and as these probation periods from selling shares on the market expire, expect a lot more shares being added to the trading float trying to capitalize on the current lofty stock price in an overall bull market to secure their Payday for these initial investors in the company a la Facebook.

 

Once key technical support levels break and automated selling programs kick in this just adds more downside fuel to the fire as investors get nervous and reevaluate their “Greed Factor” and some large initial investors who were originally thinking in terms of holding out for becoming Billionaires, start to reevaluate and settle for becoming Multi-Millionaires, thus dumping additional shares onto an already saturated market.

 

Just like in Facebook, Inc. (FB) once the earning`s reality and the share unlocking takes place the Twitter stock will enter a defined downtrend, let the stock find a bottom before venturing to enter from the long side for what may provide a value proposition at some price.

 

But time will tell exactly what price constitutes value in this name, so investors will have to continually monitor earning`s results, the overall space that Twitter operates in, along with both the overall market and global economy.

 

But one thing is sure Twitter with a current Market Cap of $38 Billion, with it not actually being a profitable company by many financial metrics, is quite an expensive stock and due for a price realignment with a healthy dose of market reality reinforced by actual earning`s results in 2014.

 

Amazon


Amazon.com Inc. (AMZN) is the next candidate ripe for a pullback in 2014, it has had a nice run the last five years and the actual trading float is really small as much of the available float is in the hands of long term investors in the company.

 

However, with QE Infinity finally looking to come to an end which has definitely benefited this stock as much as any over the last five years, these long term investors may finally start locking in these gains and secure this wealth by diversifying into more capital preservation type investments.

Especially since Amazon has gotten a relative pass on earnings over the last five years due to growing the company and gaining market share, at some point the company has to start producing larger profits than 0.28 earnings per share to justify a 1400 P/E ratio.

 

 

Our thesis on the stock is that Amazon finally starts to get punished for poor earnings in 2014 and in combination with the lofty stock appreciation over the last five years buttressed by a multitude of QE initiatives that capital gains finally get locked in at these levels in the stock.

 

Similarly to how the major Apple run to $700 a share ended very abruptly with a six month and $300 haircut in the stock, once the downturn in investor sentiment occurs, and the downtrend gains speed, losses become self-fulfilling for investors, leading to additional selling, and given how far this stock has come in recent years there is no real support until the $240 a share level.

 

Consequently if the downtrend takes hold in 2014 the pullback could be quite severe for investors trying to hold through the weakness in the stock. Sort of like David Einhorn and Greenlight Capital`s approach to their Apple position, they would have been much better off by selling at $700 a share, and buying back in after the collapse at around $400 a share.

 

Amazon is a good company with a bright future, but from a valuation standpoint it is due for a major pullback in 2014. Any investors already in the name need to take profits ASAP, and new investors should avoid trying to pick a bottom too soon, Amazon has a lot of hot air in its stock price, and once the key technical levels of support fail, look out below!

 

Tesla


Tesla Motors, Inc. (TSLA) is our third stock candidate setting up investors for a sour 2014 campaign. The stock is the ebullient highs of around $195 a share, trading currently around the $150 a share level and we expect the stock to fall below the $100 a share level some time in 2014; whether that area represents a good buying opportunity for investors is an entirely different matter.

 

But some of the headwinds for 2014 are going to be stiff earning`s comps for 2013 where environmental credits made earnings look a whole lot better than they actually were given the lofty stock price. With the dismal automobile numbers for December being recently released it appears that many people who needed to upgrade their vehicles have already done so in 2013, and this was one of our concerns with GM as a possible headwind. Furthermore, given Ford`s downbeat profit forecast in 2014, December`s automobile numbers, and the rise in interest rates 2014 seems to be setting up for disappointment in the automakers, and yes that includes the electric car manufacturers as well.

 

 

We also think 2014 is finally the year that oil prices retreat with more supply coming on line than a slightly improving economy can utilize from a demand perspective that gasoline prices stay low relative to the peaks of the last four years, thus further dis-incentivizing the electric over fossil fuel economic switch by consumers. With the US Domestic oil resurgence, North American increased output and Iraq, Libya, and Iran all producing more oil globally in 2014 we expect oil to be under considerable price pressure which ultimately reflects itself in downward pressure on alternative energy plays like TSLA.

 

Finally there is just the valuation of the stock, it can even be a great company with a long term bright future eventually, but the actual quarterly and annual automobiles that Tesla produces just doesn’t equate with a $19 Billion Market Cap with negative Earnings per Share, negative Operating Margin, negative Net Income and negative EBITDA. Plain and simple the stock is vastly over valued at current levels of automobile production based on company costs versus profits from an investment standpoint. Investors should not even begin to look at Tesla Motors, Inc. from a long standpoint until it drops below $100 a share.

 

Priceline


The fourth candidate due for a pullback in 2014 is priceline.com Incorporated (PCLN) which has had quite a run, more than doubling in 2013 alone, you think there isn`t a lot of liquidity out there in markets!

 

Priceline started 2013 at around $650 a share and reached a high of close to 1,200 a share in the fourth quarter before retreating to trading currently at the 1,130 level. You think some investors might want to take some profits in this name? You better believe it, the stock already looks to be rolling over and this stock is going to ramp up speed on the downtrend. It is a no brainer that Priceline falls below $950 a share in 2014; it is just a matter of how fast!

 

The price to the upside was fueled by the small float, low daily active trading volume, and lofty price so momentum to the long side just sort of snowballed, self-reinforcing the stock to excessive margin expansion in 2013.

 

 

With a $60 Billion Market Cap, and Gross Margin of 0.83 with Operating Margin of 0.36 and a P/E of 32.68 Priceline is one of the ‘uber-pricey’ names in the investing world and vastly over-valued when compared to solid companies like Apple Inc. (AAPL) with a P/E of 13.61 and Exxon Mobil Corporation (XOM) with a P/E of 13.00.

 

And arguments can be made for both of these solid companies to pullback in 2014 once stocks readjust to life without the Federal Reserve pumping $85 Billion worth of liquidity in the financial markets each month, i.e., Exxon Mobil Corporation is right at all-time highs for a company that has been around long enough for my grandfather to have invested in it!

 

This does not bode well for Priceline investors; get out while you still can because the drop is going to be brutal in this name for 2014. Moreover, investors in this stock, who have any historical reference, will remember the magnitude of the crash that this stock has undertaken in the past once the selling begins in earnest. For investors unfamiliar with the potential declines in this stock check the 1999 – 2000 time period charts.

 

I point this out to any bottom pickers, just stay away from this stock in 2014 the downside risk is too great for any potential upside gains, there is so much liquidity air in Priceline that there are going to be absolutely gut wrenching down days in 2014.

 

Netflix


The final stock due for a pullback in 2014 is Netflix, Inc. (NFLX) which is a great company, and has done wonders for the space, but valuations are just too rich considering the actual fundamentals of the business.

 

We have been Netflix, Inc. subscribers for years, and although we keep the product we recognize the limitations of limited selection choices compared to other online outlets, outdated series to binge upon, and more interesting live opportunities with competitive media viewing choices. My online media viewing world would be much more negatively affected if I suddenly lost YouTube access as opposed to our Netflix, Inc. subscription.

 

 

However, the real issue with Netflix is the valuation of the stock, and how much good news is already priced in the stock. Netflix received a great lift in 2013 when the original programming of House of Cards really boosted the stock, but the problem is that with binge viewing and no commercials, it only takes a weekend to knock out an entire season, and then the rest of the year is spent searching for decent content to watch. It still takes forever for the latest releases to actually hit Netflix streaming!

 

The stock more than tripled in 2013, going from around $100 a share to a high of $389 a share. The stock is currently trading at $363 a share with a Market Cap of $21 Billion, Earnings per Share of1.20, and a P/E of 303.85. Netflix is not a cheap investment, and frankly with the ever-changing landscape of online media who knows if the company will even exist in five years!

 

The problem is that with momentum stocks like Netflix, once a downside catalyst emerges, the bloom comes off the rose real quick as investors bail at record pace and all seemingly at the same time. Just look what happened to the stock when Reed Hastings raised subscriptions fees and made customers angry in the process, it went from $300 a share to $55 a share rather quickly.

 

It is no secret from an operational standpoint that Netflix is going to have to raise subscription revenue from existing customers, and at what price do customers just drop the service? We have it and frankly we can take it or leave it: the service offerings versus other viewing alternatives are probably below average even among free viewing options, and we are in the higher income bracket.

The point is that Netflix is spending a lot of money to offer what little quality content they have right now, and they will need to spend more to keep up with consumer`s demands, and from an operational standpoint does the financial math even add up – is this a “destined broke” business model long-term? Can they ever bring in enough subscription revenue to balance out the soaring content costs and escalating requirements for additional new content and not alienate their customer base in the process?

 

This is my real concern for the stock long-term aside from the 2014 valuation concerns. We don`t think the risk versus reward justifies any long position in the stock at these current price levels, and we expect a rather precipitous drop for the stock sometime during 2014.

 

If I had to bet on a catalyst it probably comes down to a series of relatively disappointing earnings reports in the wake of an increased volatility period inspired by lack of QE Liquidity in the market. Moreover, expect the drop to be significant, we expect at least a $100 a share price drop from current levels in the stock for 2014.

 

Final Thoughts


So now you have our five stock candidates ripe for a pullback in 2014. Be careful with these investment vehicles when trying to pick a bottom, just as they rose to tremendous heights with seemingly little effort, remember that margin debt has been at record levels for 2013, QE Infinity is finally being wound down, and interest rates are rising on cheap money both from a stock buybacks perspective, and an overall borrowing standpoint for the investing universe.

 

In short, these names can fall farther than investors ever think once the downside momentum kicks in, with existing buyers selling, newly added shorts coming to the table, and losses begetting additional losses. In the modern era of investing, market timing is just as important as picking the right companies to invest in, and 2014 will not be a good year for investors in these five companies.

 

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5 Stocks Due For A Pullback In 2014

By EconMatters


Beware of Bubbles & Market Valuations in QE Sloshfest


There have been several reports of money managers returning funds to investors because of a lack of attractively valued investment opportunities in the markets. This is actually very responsible and quite prudent from a fiduciary standpoint where most fund managers are so concerned about raising assets under management that they sacrifice the fund`s long term viability by investing at inopportune times, i.e., investing in assets at historically rich prices relative to the underlying fundamentals of the business. 

QE has definitely distorted many asset prices to the upside, and with it finally ending this summer, fund managers are weary of buying at these levels without a guaranteed catalyst to replace the Fed`s monthly liquidity injections, and the global economy will really need to be humming along to replace $85 Billion of Fed injections via asset purchases.

 

Thus, the takeaway is that many assets are overvalued when it comes to stock prices but we will focus on 5 candidates that we think are going to have a tougher time justifying their lofty stock prices due to a myriad of factors other than the taking away of the QE punchbowl.

 


We will start with Twitter, Inc. (TWTR) which opened its IPO around $45 a share, traded between $40 and $45 a share for several weeks and then took off with the Santa Claus December Annual Rally to $73 a share. It is currently trading around $69 a share.

 

All the valuation metrics are going to look bad with this stock from EPS to Operating Margin and EBITDA, as the story for Twitter will be one of a growth stock so none of these valuations matter in the short term. This is the bullish case for the stock, and it makes for a great investment theme if you can sell the story that normal valuation metrics don`t matter, it creates the environment that many a momentum stock feeds off of from a frenzy standpoint.

 

However, the first and second earning`s reports for Twitter in 2014 are going to bring home the reality to investors that there is a difference between a great product used by the media and various celebrities for marketing purposes, and a revenue generating model that justifies a $38 Billion Market Cap.

 

 

The next bearish catalyst is the ending of the Lock-up Period, and as these probation periods from selling shares on the market expire, expect a lot more shares being added to the trading float trying to capitalize on the current lofty stock price in an overall bull market to secure their Payday for these initial investors in the company a la Facebook.

 

Once key technical support levels break and automated selling programs kick in this just adds more downside fuel to the fire as investors get nervous and reevaluate their “Greed Factor” and some large initial investors who were originally thinking in terms of holding out for becoming Billionaires, start to reevaluate and settle for becoming Multi-Millionaires, thus dumping additional shares onto an already saturated market.

 

Just like in Facebook, Inc. (FB) once the earning`s reality and the share unlocking takes place the Twitter stock will enter a defined downtrend, let the stock find a bottom before venturing to enter from the long side for what may provide a value proposition at some price.

 

But time will tell exactly what price constitutes value in this name, so investors will have to continually monitor earning`s results, the overall space that Twitter operates in, along with both the overall market and global economy.

 

But one thing is sure Twitter with a current Market Cap of $38 Billion, with it not actually being a profitable company by many financial metrics, is quite an expensive stock and due for a price realignment with a healthy dose of market reality reinforced by actual earning`s results in 2014.

 

Amazon


Amazon.com Inc. (AMZN) is the next candidate ripe for a pullback in 2014, it has had a nice run the last five years and the actual trading float is really small as much of the available float is in the hands of long term investors in the company.

 

However, with QE Infinity finally looking to come to an end which has definitely benefited this stock as much as any over the last five years, these long term investors may finally start locking in these gains and secure this wealth by diversifying into more capital preservation type investments.

Especially since Amazon has gotten a relative pass on earnings over the last five years due to growing the company and gaining market share, at some point the company has to start producing larger profits than 0.28 earnings per share to justify a 1400 P/E ratio.

 

 

Our thesis on the stock is that Amazon finally starts to get punished for poor earnings in 2014 and in combination with the lofty stock appreciation over the last five years buttressed by a multitude of QE initiatives that capital gains finally get locked in at these levels in the stock.

 

Similarly to how the major Apple run to $700 a share ended very abruptly with a six month and $300 haircut in the stock, once the downturn in investor sentiment occurs, and the downtrend gains speed, losses become self-fulfilling for investors, leading to additional selling, and given how far this stock has come in recent years there is no real support until the $240 a share level.

 

Consequently if the downtrend takes hold in 2014 the pullback could be quite severe for investors trying to hold through the weakness in the stock. Sort of like David Einhorn and Greenlight Capital`s approach to their Apple position, they would have been much better off by selling at $700 a share, and buying back in after the collapse at around $400 a share.

 

Amazon is a good company with a bright future, but from a valuation standpoint it is due for a major pullback in 2014. Any investors already in the name need to take profits ASAP, and new investors should avoid trying to pick a bottom too soon, Amazon has a lot of hot air in its stock price, and once the key technical levels of support fail, look out below!

 

Tesla


Tesla Motors, Inc. (TSLA) is our third stock candidate setting up investors for a sour 2014 campaign. The stock is the ebullient highs of around $195 a share, trading currently around the $150 a share level and we expect the stock to fall below the $100 a share level some time in 2014; whether that area represents a good buying opportunity for investors is an entirely different matter.

 

But some of the headwinds for 2014 are going to be stiff earning`s comps for 2013 where environmental credits made earnings look a whole lot better than they actually were given the lofty stock price. With the dismal automobile numbers for December being recently released it appears that many people who needed to upgrade their vehicles have already done so in 2013, and this was one of our concerns with GM as a possible headwind. Furthermore, given Ford`s downbeat profit forecast in 2014, December`s automobile numbers, and the rise in interest rates 2014 seems to be setting up for disappointment in the automakers, and yes that includes the electric car manufacturers as well.

 

 

We also think 2014 is finally the year that oil prices retreat with more supply coming on line than a slightly improving economy can utilize from a demand perspective that gasoline prices stay low relative to the peaks of the last four years, thus further dis-incentivizing the electric over fossil fuel economic switch by consumers. With the US Domestic oil resurgence, North American increased output and Iraq, Libya, and Iran all producing more oil globally in 2014 we expect oil to be under considerable price pressure which ultimately reflects itself in downward pressure on alternative energy plays like TSLA.

 

Finally there is just the valuation of the stock, it can even be a great company with a long term bright future eventually, but the actual quarterly and annual automobiles that Tesla produces just doesn’t equate with a $19 Billion Market Cap with negative Earnings per Share, negative Operating Margin, negative Net Income and negative EBITDA. Plain and simple the stock is vastly over valued at current levels of automobile production based on company costs versus profits from an investment standpoint. Investors should not even begin to look at Tesla Motors, Inc. from a long standpoint until it drops below $100 a share.

 

Priceline


The fourth candidate due for a pullback in 2014 is priceline.com Incorporated (PCLN) which has had quite a run, more than doubling in 2013 alone, you think there isn`t a lot of liquidity out there in markets!

 

Priceline started 2013 at around $650 a share and reached a high of close to 1,200 a share in the fourth quarter before retreating to trading currently at the 1,130 level. You think some investors might want to take some profits in this name? You better believe it, the stock already looks to be rolling over and this stock is going to ramp up speed on the downtrend. It is a no brainer that Priceline falls below $950 a share in 2014; it is just a matter of how fast!

 

The price to the upside was fueled by the small float, low daily active trading volume, and lofty price so momentum to the long side just sort of snowballed, self-reinforcing the stock to excessive margin expansion in 2013.

 

 

With a $60 Billion Market Cap, and Gross Margin of 0.83 with Operating Margin of 0.36 and a P/E of 32.68 Priceline is one of the ‘uber-pricey’ names in the investing world and vastly over-valued when compared to solid companies like Apple Inc. (AAPL) with a P/E of 13.61 and Exxon Mobil Corporation (XOM) with a P/E of 13.00.

 

And arguments can be made for both of these solid companies to pullback in 2014 once stocks readjust to life without the Federal Reserve pumping $85 Billion worth of liquidity in the financial markets each month, i.e., Exxon Mobil Corporation is right at all-time highs for a company that has been around long enough for my grandfather to have invested in it!

 

This does not bode well for Priceline investors; get out while you still can because the drop is going to be brutal in this name for 2014. Moreover, investors in this stock, who have any historical reference, will remember the magnitude of the crash that this stock has undertaken in the past once the selling begins in earnest. For investors unfamiliar with the potential declines in this stock check the 1999 – 2000 time period charts.

 

I point this out to any bottom pickers, just stay away from this stock in 2014 the downside risk is too great for any potential upside gains, there is so much liquidity air in Priceline that there are going to be absolutely gut wrenching down days in 2014.

 

Netflix


The final stock due for a pullback in 2014 is Netflix, Inc. (NFLX) which is a great company, and has done wonders for the space, but valuations are just too rich considering the actual fundamentals of the business.

 

We have been Netflix, Inc. subscribers for years, and although we keep the product we recognize the limitations of limited selection choices compared to other online outlets, outdated series to binge upon, and more interesting live opportunities with competitive media viewing choices. My online media viewing world would be much more negatively affected if I suddenly lost YouTube access as opposed to our Netflix, Inc. subscription.

 

 

However, the real issue with Netflix is the valuation of the stock, and how much good news is already priced in the stock. Netflix received a great lift in 2013 when the original programming of House of Cards really boosted the stock, but the problem is that with binge viewing and no commercials, it only takes a weekend to knock out an entire season, and then the rest of the year is spent searching for decent content to watch. It still takes forever for the latest releases to actually hit Netflix streaming!

 

The stock more than tripled in 2013, going from around $100 a share to a high of $389 a share. The stock is currently trading at $363 a share with a Market Cap of $21 Billion, Earnings per Share of1.20, and a P/E of 303.85. Netflix is not a cheap investment, and frankly with the ever-changing landscape of online media who knows if the company will even exist in five years!

 

The problem is that with momentum stocks like Netflix, once a downside catalyst emerges, the bloom comes off the rose real quick as investors bail at record pace and all seemingly at the same time. Just look what happened to the stock when Reed Hastings raised subscriptions fees and made customers angry in the process, it went from $300 a share to $55 a share rather quickly.

 

It is no secret from an operational standpoint that Netflix is going to have to raise subscription revenue from existing customers, and at what price do customers just drop the service? We have it and frankly we can take it or leave it: the service offerings versus other viewing alternatives are probably below average even among free viewing options, and we are in the higher income bracket.

The point is that Netflix is spending a lot of money to offer what little quality content they have right now, and they will need to spend more to keep up with consumer`s demands, and from an operational standpoint does the financial math even add up – is this a “destined broke” business model long-term? Can they ever bring in enough subscription revenue to balance out the soaring content costs and escalating requirements for additional new content and not alienate their customer base in the process?

 

This is my real concern for the stock long-term aside from the 2014 valuation concerns. We don`t think the risk versus reward justifies any long position in the stock at these current price levels, and we expect a rather precipitous drop for the stock sometime during 2014.

 

If I had to bet on a catalyst it probably comes down to a series of relatively disappointing earnings reports in the wake of an increased volatility period inspired by lack of QE Liquidity in the market. Moreover, expect the drop to be significant, we expect at least a $100 a share price drop from current levels in the stock for 2014.

 

Final Thoughts


So now you have our five stock candidates ripe for a pullback in 2014. Be careful with these investment vehicles when trying to pick a bottom, just as they rose to tremendous heights with seemingly little effort, remember that margin debt has been at record levels for 2013, QE Infinity is finally being wound down, and interest rates are rising on cheap money both from a stock buybacks perspective, and an overall borrowing standpoint for the investing universe.

 

In short, these names can fall farther than investors ever think once the downside momentum kicks in, with existing buyers selling, newly added shorts coming to the table, and losses begetting additional losses. In the modern era of investing, market timing is just as important as picking the right companies to invest in, and 2014 will not be a good year for investors in these five companies.

 

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Rolling Stone Resurrects Karl Marx (And No – It Was Not Satire)

Submitted by Pater Tenebrarum of Acting-Man blog,

The Problem of Economic Ignorance

The fact that economic ignorance is widespread is really a big problem in our view. Unfortunately even what is broadly considered the economic mainstream thought is riddled with stuff that we think just doesn't represent good economics. This is not meant to say that there is absolutely nothing worthwhile offered by the so-called mainstream. Often one comes across valuable insights and stimulating ideas. Still, there are a number of very fundamental issues on which various schools of economic thought don't agree  – beginning with basic questions of methodology.

Regarding the place economics should have in our lives, Ludwig von Mises once wrote:

“Economics must not be relegated to classrooms and statistical offices and must not be left to esoteric circles. It is the philosophy of human life and action and concerns everybody and everything. It is the pith of civilization and of man's human existence.”

We agree wholeheartedly with this sentiment. There is little harm in leaving astronomy to astronomers and quantum physics to experts in theoretical physics. With economics it is different, because even though it is supposed to be wertfrei (value-free) as a science, economics necessarily has a political dimension, since politics is all about the acquisition and distribution of property by political (as opposed to economic) means. In other words, economic policy is the main topic around which politics revolves.

When Mises wrote the above words, he thought of economics as a more or less unified science, in broad agreement on basic concepts. In a way that is still true, but it is less true than it once was. For instance, to briefly come back to the point about methodology, Mises spent a lot of effort on systematizing the economic method and discussing the epistemological problems of economics. However, while doing so, he never doubted for a moment that it was quite clear to all economists that the science had to proceed by means of deductive reasoning and logic. He probably didn't expect that positivism would eventually conquer economics. As an aside, if one looks closely, one soon realizes that even the most committed positivists and econometricians secretly agree that there actually is such a thing as the laws of economics, and that these laws are not necessarily all derived from empirical observation.

Be that as it may, there is definitely a great deal of economic ignorance out there. Partly it is actually furthered by statist propaganda and obfuscation. For instance, the average citizen is not supposed to question the centrally planned monetary system, and neither is he supposed to actually understand how it works (hence what is actually a pretty straightforward operation has become a fairly complex variation of the Three Card Monte, designed to obfuscate the system's inherently fraudulent nature).

How much ignorance there is regularly becomes evident by things such as e.g. the enduring popularity of protectionism (it is almost as though consumers enjoy harming themselves).

Another glaring example is the still widespread idea that socialism – or rather, communism (i.e., full-scale socialism as opposed to its milder 'democratic' version) – would be 'the best possible system of social and economic organization if only it were implemented correctly', or the variant ' … if only human nature were different and we were morally more advanced than we actually are'.

The main problem with this train of thought is that it is actually completely wrong. When confronting supporters of socialism with the total failure and murderous nature of the communist system in the real world, a common retort is that 'this wasn't real socialism'. In other words, if Lenin, Stalin, Mao and their followers had only implemented everything according to the precepts of Karl Marx, then things would have been perfectly fine, and the communists would have erected a king of land of Cockaigne.

However, not only did they in fact follow the precepts laid down by Marx and Engels, but even if e.g. Stalin had been a veritable angel, the system would still have failed. Socialism is literally impossible as Mises has already proved in 1920. In brief: it is a system in which rational economic calculation becomes impossible, because there are no longer prices for capital goods once private property in the means of production is abolished. A system bereft of economic calculation can no longer allocate scarce resources efficiently. It cannot really be called an economy anymore. It a system that is doomed to break down in short order, and the only reason why it survived as long as it did in the former Eastern Bloc was that the COMECON planners were able to observe the price system in the capitalist countries and so could engage in a rudimentary form of economic calculation. Had the whole world become socialistic, the economy and division of labor would have completely collapsed within a few years and people would have been forced to return to a hand-to-mouth existence, barely able to subsist. Life would once again have become 'nasty, brutish and short'.

 

No, It Was Not Meant to Be a Satire …

In other words, it seems quite important that people really understand why socialism cannot work. After all, bad ideas have a habit of coming back after a while and an example for this has just been delivered via an editorial in the 'Rolling Stone', penned by one Jesse A. Myerson, a former 'Occupy' movement organizer.

At first many people mistakenly thought it was meant to be a satire, but it soon turned out it actually wasn't. On Twitter, Myerson runs the hashtag #FULLCOMMUNISM (anything less than the 'full' version apparently won't do), so there can be no doubt as to his ideological proclivities.

Anyway, in his article, couched in 'hip' language (the word 'blow' or 'blows' is used frequently, as in e.g. 'work blows'), he argues that millennials should make five economic demands, namely:

1. Guaranteed work for everybody, 2. a basic income for everybody (he calls that 'social security', but he actually means that everybody should get a government salary in exchange for – nothing. Being able to fog a mirror is sufficient reason), 3. the expropriation of landowners (it is not 100% clear if he merely argues for a Georgist land tax or full-scale expropriation), 4. the abolition of private property and nationalization of the means of production, and 5. a 'public bank in every state'.

The last demand sounds like he has picked up the ideas of the Greenbackers and associated monetary cranks, who hold that the monetary system could be improved if money printing were left to politicians directly rather than a central bank (for a trenchant critique of Greenbackism, read Gary North, who correctly notes that the ideology is at the root indistinguishable from Hitler's economic program).

So essentially, this leader/hero of the 'Occupy' movement proposes an economic program that is a jumbled mixture of Marxism/Stalinism, Georgism and National Socialism. Whoa!

Luckily not even the readers of Rolling Stone are falling for this stuff, judging from the comments section below the editorial. However, we have once again come across many comments that show that the problem discussed further above continues to persist – i.e., many people still seem convinced that communism would actually work if only it were 'done right'. That this is a fundamental error needs to be pointed out at every opportunity.

Not surprisingly, Myerson has become a target of ridicule all over the media landscape by now. Especially conservative columnists had a field day. However, Myerson of course stands by his nonsense, and attempted to defend it on Twitter and elsewhere. One of the more interesting conversations revolved around the accusation that what he proposed amounted to a defense of the system practiced by the Soviet Union. Since it has clearly failed there, there was really nothing left to discuss. As one might expect, Myerson retorted that of course, the Soviets never implemented his demands. In other words, the leftist trope that the 'communists never really tried communism' was predictably dug up by him. If only they had done so, they would of course have succeeded, so the story goes.

Unfortunately for him, there are a great many fact checkers out and about these days.  One of them proved that not only had every single one of his demands been implemented by the Soviets, but they were actually without exception part of the Soviet constitution. On the Drew Musings blog an article entitled “Advocate For #FULLCOMMUNISM Says Soviet Union Did Not Try #FULLCOMMUNISMhas all the details and quotes from the Soviet Union's constitution. As Drew concludes, the only thing that still needs to be mentioned regarding the communists is that

 

“They did succeed at one thing…killing million upon millions of people in their efforts to remake society and maintain their control. #FULLCOMMUNISM = #MILLIONSDEAD. Always has, always will.”

 

That is not exactly an unimportant detail. Since the expropriation of private property necessarily involves force, it cannot be implemented without killing and imprisoning people. Once the system is established, it must continue to use force to ensure that the new ruling class won't be challenged and that the system remains in place.

 

Conclusion:

It is heartening that so many people, including the readership of the generally leftist Rolling Stone magazine, have vehemently disagreed with Myerson and heaped ridicule on his vile editorial. However, keep in mind that as time passes, the ignominious collapse of the communist system will become an ever more distant memory. In fact, that such an article is published at all is already a sign that this is happening. It is also concerning that the idea that communism would be just fine if only implemented correctly continues to be held by so many people. This is a result of widespread economic ignorance. It is more important to challenge the ideas propagated by Myerson on theoretical grounds than by merely citing historical events. Only if it is widely understood by people that socialism is indeed impossible will the danger posed by the Marxist ideology truly be banned.

 


 

communists

The fathers of the Marxist ideology, Marx and Engels and two important leaders of the Marxist reality, Lenin and Stalin – briefly resurrected by the 'Rolling Stone'. Let us make sure they are interred again.


    



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Are Stocks Cheap?

We have asked (and answered) this question a number of times in recent weeks. Ignoring for a moment the bubble-trajectory, hope-expectations, and investor sentiment, as ex-Morgan Stanley-ite Gerard Minack notes, equity markets in 2013 appeared to completely ignore macro fundamentals. For 2014, as we warned here, the dream of moar multiple expansion may be over. With the Fed desperate to convince the world that strong language is just as effective as 100s of billions of dollars in liquidity provision, we suspect the ‘wedge’ between hope and reality will compress (significantly)…

 

 

 

Even Goldman Sachs is starting to question the sanity of its clients hopes and dreams…

S&P 500 valuation is lofty by almost any measure, both for the aggregate market (15.9x) as well as the median stock (16.8x).

 

We believe S&P 500 trades close to fair value and the forward path will depend on profit growth rather than P/E expansion.

 

However, many clients argue that the P/E multiple will continue to rise in 2014 with 17x or 18x often cited, with some investors arguing for 20x.

 

We conclude that further P/E expansion will be difficult to achieve. Of course, it is possible. It is just not probable based on history.

 

This won’t end well…

 

Chart: Bloomberg


    



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The Good And The Bad News For The Future Of America’s Jobs

As we reported earlier (and have been for the past three years), there is a reason why the media prefers not to talk about the quality aspect of US job gains, and instead focuses on the seasonally adjusted quantity: there simply is no “quality.” Take today for example, when we learned that more than half of the 74K jobs gained in the month of December were temp jobs (which mysteriously were not affected by the weather: only the high paying ones somehow got crushed by snow in December), and when adding the lowest paying retail and wholesale trade jobs, one got nearly 50% more than all the job gains for the past month.

Perhaps the only good news in today’s job report is that it is now in the past, because absent from some inexplicably respected so-called pundits doing the most idiotic thing imaginable, and saying to just ignore this report, there was absolutely nothing good one could say about the lowest monthly job gain since January 2011 (driven by temp and retail workers) at least until it is revised several times over the next 3 years when we ultimately learn that today’s noisy jobs print was really a gain of 500K jobs. Of course by then, there will be far bigger problem to deal with.

However, while December in the past, the future still remains. And it is here that we have some good and bad news. According to the just released Occupation Outlook Quarterly (OOQ) looking at the period from 2012 to 2022 released by the BLS, in the future the US will be in a significant need of jobs, which is good for all those worried that the economy is grinding to a halt, or those demoralized from not having a job for months on end and unsure if this will ever change.

That’s the good news.

The bad news is that as in the case of today, the vast majority of future jobs will pay absolutely miserable salaries.

The chart below shows what we are talking about: it lays out the job categories for the 20 occupations with with the highest projected numeric change in employment. Alas, of the Top 10 highest growing jobs, 9 out of 10 will pay less than $35,000 a year.

Furthermore the composition of where the job growth is expected tells us much about where the government see this nation in the year 2022. Take for example personal-care aides which will be the fastest growing job from 2012 to 2022, among categories with more than 25,000 positions, the Labor Department said in a new report. The field will grow by nearly 50% to 1.8 million jobs.

This is how the OOQ describes this job group:

Personal-care aides help clients “with self-care and everyday tasks, and provide companionship,” the newly released Occupational Outlook Handbook said. The job requires no formal education, but most aides have a high school diploma. Workers in the field earned an average annual income of $19,910. “As the baby-boom population ages, there will be an increase in the number of clients requiring assistance,” the handbook said.

What else is expected to soar? Registered nurses, retail salespeople, home health aides and … fast food workers. That’s the sad future of the US: a nation made up of old people desperate for nurses, and paid companions, who go out shopping and eating fast food.

Ok, it is not surprising that the most jobs will go to the unqualified, uneducated, and unmotivated. Is there any hope for higher paying jobs according to the BLS? Some more good news: the answer is yes!

Actually, considering the most in demand higher paying job will be lawyers, forget what we said about good news.

Finally, looking purely at the bad news, all workers in the government, postal service, animal production and newspaper industries have something to look forward to: a pink slip.

Source


    



via Zero Hedge http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/zerohedge/feed/~3/l77xpknYu4A/story01.htm Tyler Durden

The Good And The Bad News For The Future Of America's Jobs

As we reported earlier (and have been for the past three years), there is a reason why the media prefers not to talk about the quality aspect of US job gains, and instead focuses on the seasonally adjusted quantity: there simply is no “quality.” Take today for example, when we learned that more than half of the 74K jobs gained in the month of December were temp jobs (which mysteriously were not affected by the weather: only the high paying ones somehow got crushed by snow in December), and when adding the lowest paying retail and wholesale trade jobs, one got nearly 50% more than all the job gains for the past month.

Perhaps the only good news in today’s job report is that it is now in the past, because absent from some inexplicably respected so-called pundits doing the most idiotic thing imaginable, and saying to just ignore this report, there was absolutely nothing good one could say about the lowest monthly job gain since January 2011 (driven by temp and retail workers) at least until it is revised several times over the next 3 years when we ultimately learn that today’s noisy jobs print was really a gain of 500K jobs. Of course by then, there will be far bigger problem to deal with.

However, while December in the past, the future still remains. And it is here that we have some good and bad news. According to the just released Occupation Outlook Quarterly (OOQ) looking at the period from 2012 to 2022 released by the BLS, in the future the US will be in a significant need of jobs, which is good for all those worried that the economy is grinding to a halt, or those demoralized from not having a job for months on end and unsure if this will ever change.

That’s the good news.

The bad news is that as in the case of today, the vast majority of future jobs will pay absolutely miserable salaries.

The chart below shows what we are talking about: it lays out the job categories for the 20 occupations with with the highest projected numeric change in employment. Alas, of the Top 10 highest growing jobs, 9 out of 10 will pay less than $35,000 a year.

Furthermore the composition of where the job growth is expected tells us much about where the government see this nation in the year 2022. Take for example personal-care aides which will be the fastest growing job from 2012 to 2022, among categories with more than 25,000 positions, the Labor Department said in a new report. The field will grow by nearly 50% to 1.8 million jobs.

This is how the OOQ describes this job group:

Personal-care aides help clients “with self-care and everyday tasks, and provide companionship,” the newly released Occupational Outlook Handbook said. The job requires no formal education, but most aides have a high school diploma. Workers in the field earned an average annual income of $19,910. “As the baby-boom population ages, there will be an increase in the number of clients requiring assistance,” the handbook said.

What else is expected to soar? Registered nurses, retail salespeople, home health aides and … fast food workers. That’s the sad future of the US: a nation made up of old people desperate for nurses, and paid companions, who go out shopping and eating fast food.

Ok, it is not surprising that the most jobs will go to the unqualified, uneducated, and unmotivated. Is there any hope for higher paying jobs according to the BLS? Some more good news: the answer is yes!

Actually, considering the most in demand higher paying job will be lawyers, forget what we said about good news.

Finally, looking purely at the bad news, all workers in the government, postal service, animal production and newspaper industries have something to look forward to: a pink slip.

Source


    



via Zero Hedge http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/zerohedge/feed/~3/l77xpknYu4A/story01.htm Tyler Durden