Here's A Great Way To Lose Money…

Submitted by Simon Black via Sovereign Man blog,

There’s a nasty little parasite that exists in nature known as the nematomorph hairworm (Spinochordodes tellinii) which typically infects grasshoppers and crickets.

Once fully grown, the worm is able to profoundly affect the behavior of its host; most notably, the worm can actually compel a grasshopper to throw itself into water.

This is great for the worm as it needs the moisture to reproduce. But for the grasshopper, it’s deadly.

There’s another vile protozoan known as Toxoplasma gondii. According to a 2007 study, rats and mice who are infected with it demonstrate a marked reduction in natural defenses, making them far more susceptible to being eaten by cats.

Nature is full of these unpleasant parasites which cause their hosts to engage in irrational, destructive, or even suicidal behavior.

Of course, they exist for humans too… especially for investors. In fact probably the number one parasite which affects investors is a very peculiar emotion: fear.

Specifically, it’s the fear of missing out that drives so much irrational investment behavior. Nobody wants to miss a big boom, no matter how baseless the fundamentals.

It’s this fear of missing out that compels people to continue investing in stocks, even though they are near all-time highs and trading at Price/Earnings ratios that are historically dangerous.

Ironically, this fear of missing out is stronger than the fear of loss. But if everyone else is jumping in, it’s easier to ignore the obvious risks of losing our life’s savings investing in ridiculously overvalued stocks.

Following the crowd is a great way to lose a lot of money.

Some of the most successful investors in history have been those who had the courage to go against the investment herd mentality. They conquered the fear of missing out, and they bought what everyone else hated… or looked where nobody else was looking.

In today’s investment climate, though, where central bankers are printing trillions of dollars per year and pushing up the prices of assets everywhere, it’s hard to find too many sectors or asset classes that are ‘hated’. But a few exist:

1) Precious metals

The market has all but stuck a fork in gold. It’s done. Or at least, so says the conventional wisdom. Taper talk and sentiment of stronger economic growth have prompted investors to mostly abandon gold, silver, platinum, etc.

2) Mining companies

With losses in the metals and mining margins declining, share prices for mining companies have gone from ugly to bufugly… and many long-term mining investors are collectively ripping their faces off.

3) Emerging market currencies

Currencies across the developing world– Turkey, India Indonesia, Uruguay, etc. have been battered senselessly over the last few months on fears of a global slowdown despite many of those nations’ stronger economic and demographic fundamentals.

As for what’s not hated– that’s easy. Stocks in the US and Western Europe are at/near all-time highs.

The Chinese renminbi is at a multi-year high. And inexplicably, the market is showing a lot of confidence in both the euro and the dollar right now.

Government bonds of heavily indebted western governments are still viewed as no-brainer safe havens.

The governments of Spain and Italy, in fact, just issued new bonds at a record low yields… nevermind 57.7% youth unemployment or obscene levels of debt and deficit spending.

And, despite gradually rising interest rates which adversely impact prices and affordability, US housing is once again front and center in the media as a safe investment.

Last– what’s not even on the radar of the collective investment herd?

In my view, few conventional investors are even thinking about farmland overseas (ex-US), or private equity in developing markets. More on those soon.


    



via Zero Hedge http://ift.tt/1cwv0KH Tyler Durden

Here’s A Great Way To Lose Money…

Submitted by Simon Black via Sovereign Man blog,

There’s a nasty little parasite that exists in nature known as the nematomorph hairworm (Spinochordodes tellinii) which typically infects grasshoppers and crickets.

Once fully grown, the worm is able to profoundly affect the behavior of its host; most notably, the worm can actually compel a grasshopper to throw itself into water.

This is great for the worm as it needs the moisture to reproduce. But for the grasshopper, it’s deadly.

There’s another vile protozoan known as Toxoplasma gondii. According to a 2007 study, rats and mice who are infected with it demonstrate a marked reduction in natural defenses, making them far more susceptible to being eaten by cats.

Nature is full of these unpleasant parasites which cause their hosts to engage in irrational, destructive, or even suicidal behavior.

Of course, they exist for humans too… especially for investors. In fact probably the number one parasite which affects investors is a very peculiar emotion: fear.

Specifically, it’s the fear of missing out that drives so much irrational investment behavior. Nobody wants to miss a big boom, no matter how baseless the fundamentals.

It’s this fear of missing out that compels people to continue investing in stocks, even though they are near all-time highs and trading at Price/Earnings ratios that are historically dangerous.

Ironically, this fear of missing out is stronger than the fear of loss. But if everyone else is jumping in, it’s easier to ignore the obvious risks of losing our life’s savings investing in ridiculously overvalued stocks.

Following the crowd is a great way to lose a lot of money.

Some of the most successful investors in history have been those who had the courage to go against the investment herd mentality. They conquered the fear of missing out, and they bought what everyone else hated… or looked where nobody else was looking.

In today’s investment climate, though, where central bankers are printing trillions of dollars per year and pushing up the prices of assets everywhere, it’s hard to find too many sectors or asset classes that are ‘hated’. But a few exist:

1) Precious metals

The market has all but stuck a fork in gold. It’s done. Or at least, so says the conventional wisdom. Taper talk and sentiment of stronger economic growth have prompted investors to mostly abandon gold, silver, platinum, etc.

2) Mining companies

With losses in the metals and mining margins declining, share prices for mining companies have gone from ugly to bufugly… and many long-term mining investors are collectively ripping their faces off.

3) Emerging market currencies

Currencies across the developing world– Turkey, India Indonesia, Uruguay, etc. have been battered senselessly over the last few months on fears of a global slowdown despite many of those nations’ stronger economic and demographic fundamentals.

As for what’s not hated– that’s easy. Stocks in the US and Western Europe are at/near all-time highs.

The Chinese renminbi is at a multi-year high. And inexplicably, the market is showing a lot of confidence in both the euro and the dollar right now.

Government bonds of heavily indebted western governments are still viewed as no-brainer safe havens.

The governments of Spain and Italy, in fact, just issued new bonds at a record low yields… nevermind 57.7% youth unemployment or obscene levels of debt and deficit spending.

And, despite gradually rising interest rates which adversely impact prices and affordability, US housing is once again front and center in the media as a safe investment.

Last– what’s not even on the radar of the collective investment herd?

In my view, few conventional investors are even thinking about farmland overseas (ex-US), or private equity in developing markets. More on those soon.


    



via Zero Hedge http://ift.tt/1cwv0KH Tyler Durden

The Death Cross Of US Manufacturing

The theme of both the robot-ization of the global workforce and the populist desire for a hike in the minimum wage have been popular and ongoing ones here at Zero Hedge. However, never has it been more clear just where the future lies than this chart from BofAML’s Michael Hartnett… As he says, “we are long robots, and short human beings.”

 

 

Of course – from Applebees to Jamba Juice and now fast-food restaurants, the robots are coming and cries of millions of minimum-wage-hike-demanding union workers will do nothing but encourage it… (oh and the Fed’s financial repression)

 

 

Chart: BofAML


    



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Closing Ramp Unramped

Equity markets were stumbling lower into the close of the US day session and volume was picking up… the powers that be clearly decided that was not to be allowed and the NASDAQ needed to close green (as we noted previously). JPY was not going to help as overnight volatility had reduced carry games so… slam dat VIX was the game. While not much in nominal size, the 0.3 vols smackdown in VIX starting at 1550ET lifted the S&P 3.5 points to close at the afternoon highs (and helped NASDAQ green and new highs)… But, seconds later (as INTC and AXP earnings disappointed), the entire ramp – and more – was dissolved before S&P futures closed. Ah, the efficient markets…

 

S&P 500 Cash index traders were treated (green oval) to a late-day VIX smashdown momentum ignition fantasy to lift the index up to highs… and then (as is clear from the futures in blue, the markets crumbled after hours)…

 

Charts: Bloomberg

 


    



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Border Agency “Discovered” That It Lent Predator Drones Almost 200 More Times Than Previously Disclosed

The Customs and Border Protection agency (CBP) claims that it

recently “discovered”
that it in three year period, it lent out
predator drones to other agencies for domestic use on nearly 200
more occasions than it previously acknowledged.

The CBP didn’t divulge this surprising information unprovoked.
The Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) has been slowly wrangling
data out of the Department of Homeland Security (DHS), which
oversees the CBP, through a
Freedom of Information Request
(FOIA) lawsuit since 2012.

When the agency made its initial release in September 2013, the
content was alarming enough. The documents revealed that
federal, state, and local agencies borrowed drones 498 times from
2010 through 2012. Various military branches, the FBI, Bureau of
Indian Affairs, North Dakota Narcotics Task Force, Minnesota Bureau
of Criminal Investigations, and numerous unnamed county sheriff’s
offices were among the recipients. The FOIA document also
contradicted information the federal government made available to
the public. The Department of Justice issued a report that, as of
May 2013, it only utilized CBP drones twice. The EFF
reports
that the “CBP flew its drones over 100 times
just for Department of Justice components including FBI, DEA and US
Marshals.”

Conveniently, the agency forgot about an enormous chunk of data
until “the eve of the pivotal court hearing on those motions in
December 2013,” the EFF
explains
. The CBP actually lent drones a total of 687 times,
not 498. Also, a
wide range
of agencies have been added to the list of
recipients. This includes the Federal Aviation Administration,
Arizona Department of Public Safety, and a mysteriously titled
“Local PD Officer.” The EFF notes that the CBP’s latest
announcement “reveal[s] a sharp increase in the number of flights
for certain federal agencies like ICE (53 more flights than
previously revealed) and the Drug Enforcement Agency (20 more
flights).”

On top of the red flags of the CBP’s tricky behavior, the lack
of consistent information reported across agencies, and the
militarization of domestic police forces, the FOIA data highlights
another problem with the drone borrowing program. As Tim Cushing of
Techdirt
points out
 “borrowing a drone indicates the agency likely
doesn’t already have one — which also indicates it doesn’t have
anything in place to govern its use or disposal of unneeded or
incidental data.” This lack of institutional checks opens up the
real possibility that these various government outfits could
continue to abuse their ability to collect and access data, not
just on people near the southern border, but
virtually anywhere
in the country.

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The NSA Knows Who You Texted Your Naked Pics To, Gov. Christie Sets Up Scandal Investigation Team, Ohio’s New Execution Drug Cocktail Seems Unpleasant: P.M. Links

  • The NSA will CU L8R, too.The latest National Security
    Agency secret revealed via Edward Snowden is that the government
    has collected more than
    200 million text messages a day
    through an untargeted system
    that allows them to extract location, contact networks and credit
    card details.  
  • Maryland lawmakers are proposing
    legalizing, taxing, and regulating marijuana
    , but their chances
    of success appear low.
  • Gov. Chris Christie has set up a team to conduct an
    internal review
    and investigate the details of the George
    Washington Bridge lane closure scandal.
  • Ohio used a new drug cocktail for executions never attempted in
    the United States. The result, witnesses say, is that inmate Dennis
    McGuire
    convulsed for about 10 minutes
    before actually dying.
  • The federal government
    loses $100 billion a year
    in program payments that are made
    erroneously. I’m actually a little shocked the figure is not
    higher, though given that the numbers come from the government
    itself, it probably actually is.
  • The Detroit bankruptcy judge has a rejected a
    $165 million compromise deal
    between the city and banks to
    handle the debt that resulted from a disastrous agreement entered
    into to avoid defaulting on pension payments. The judge said the
    money was too much to accept.

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Despite Late-Day VIX Slam, S&P Slides Back Into Red For 2014

While victory was declared yesterday, today was a let-down for the exuberant. High beta (NASDAQ and Russell) pushed on but the S&P, Dow, and Trannies slid leaving the NASDAQ YTD best performer (+1%) and the S&P back into the red for 2014. Financials underperformed, Utilities outperformed. Treasuries rallied all day – with the long-end underperforming and a notable flattening across the curve (30Y -2bps on the week, 5Y +2bps). The USD had a quiet day as JPY strengthened modestly (hence the weakness in the S&P) as overnight AUD weakness (poor jobs data) left that carry pair alone in the dark. VIX and credit markets have been notable underperformers relative to stocks in the last 2 days. Commodities were quiet all day with some early downside pressure in the precious metals unwound (leaving then down 0.5% on the week). Of course, it wouldn't be the US equity market without the ubiquitous VIX slam attempt to ignite momentum and get the S&P green – it failed for once!

 

VIX is not amused… (but of course – the last few minutes saw a VIX smasher…)

 

Nor is credit…

 

But the NASDAQ and Russell don't care – if it worked yesterday, it will tomorrow, right?

 

on the day the late-day ramp saved the NASDAQ from a red close and rammed Trannies higher…

 

Treasuries rallied back into the green for the week…

 

Commodities were relatively quiet aside from some pressure in the early European session…

 

Charts: Bloomberg

Bonus Chart: Stock Sentiment vs Bond Sentiment is at a worrying level for stocks bulls (h/t @Not_Jim_Cramer)


    



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

Despite Late-Day VIX Slam, S&P Slides Back Into Red For 2014

While victory was declared yesterday, today was a let-down for the exuberant. High beta (NASDAQ and Russell) pushed on but the S&P, Dow, and Trannies slid leaving the NASDAQ YTD best performer (+1%) and the S&P back into the red for 2014. Financials underperformed, Utilities outperformed. Treasuries rallied all day – with the long-end underperforming and a notable flattening across the curve (30Y -2bps on the week, 5Y +2bps). The USD had a quiet day as JPY strengthened modestly (hence the weakness in the S&P) as overnight AUD weakness (poor jobs data) left that carry pair alone in the dark. VIX and credit markets have been notable underperformers relative to stocks in the last 2 days. Commodities were quiet all day with some early downside pressure in the precious metals unwound (leaving then down 0.5% on the week). Of course, it wouldn't be the US equity market without the ubiquitous VIX slam attempt to ignite momentum and get the S&P green – it failed for once!

 

VIX is not amused… (but of course – the last few minutes saw a VIX smasher…)

 

Nor is credit…

 

But the NASDAQ and Russell don't care – if it worked yesterday, it will tomorrow, right?

 

on the day the late-day ramp saved the NASDAQ from a red close and rammed Trannies higher…

 

Treasuries rallied back into the green for the week…

 

Commodities were relatively quiet aside from some pressure in the early European session…

 

Charts: Bloomberg

Bonus Chart: Stock Sentiment vs Bond Sentiment is at a worrying level for stocks bulls (h/t @Not_Jim_Cramer)


    



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

Torrance D.A.: Shooting at Truck Because You Think Driver Might Be Out to Kill You Makes Perfect Sense, Even if It’s a Different Model Truck and Driver Hasn’t Tried to Kill You

An annoying punctuation this week on last year’s Southern
California police reign of terror as they shot at random trucks,
thinking that just maybe they contained someone (Christopher
Dorner) accused of having killed people (and out to kill cops, the
important part).


From the Daily Breeze
:

A Torrance police officer made a “reasonable mistake” when he
shot at a Redondo Beach surfer during the chaotic manhunt for rogue
Los Angeles police officer Christopher Dorner last year and will
not face criminal charges, the District Attorney’s Office said in a
report released Tuesday.

Officer Brian McGee acted in “an atmosphere of fear and extreme
anticipation” when he purposely rammed David Perdue’s pickup truck
and fired at least three shots at him on Feb. 7, 2013, mistakenly
believing Dorner was at the wheel. The bullets missed Perdue, who
has filed a lawsuit against the city of Torrance.

“McGee’s belief that Dorner was driving the truck was
reasonable,” prosecutors said in ruling the shooting was
justified.

The reason McGee was so het up was because he had heard gunshots
a bit before he and his partner came upon Purdue and rammed his
vehicle and shot at him multiple times.

Those gunshots were more cops shooting at innocent
people–Hispanic female paper deliverers, decidedly smaller than
Dorner–in the belief they just might be Dorner.

Perdue, the report said, had just attempted to turn onto Towers
Street from Flagler, but was stopped by two Torrance officers and
told to turn around. As he headed toward Beryl Street, McGee and
[his partner Erin] Sooper headed toward him just as the LAPD’s
shots rang out.

Thus, the idiot and potentially fatal mistake by the first set
of cops created the reasonableness for the next idiot and
potentially fatal mistake. That’s government for you.

Amusingly, this very long article doesn’t even mention that
Purdue was driving a different model (Honda vs. Nissan Titan) and,
if I am seeing the accompanying picture correctly, different color
truck than what Dorner was supposed to be driving (alternately
described as grey or blue in early reports).

Purdue is also white, Dorner black. But it was early
and dark, so every truck should be shot at, just to be safe. That’s
“cop reasonable.”

Reason on
Dorner
.

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