Personal Finance
To make money and survive in the markets I constantly ask myself , “Are you trading the market the way it is…or the way you think it SHOULD be?” I ask myself this question to guard against making a trade before it’s TIME to make the trade…and I ask myself this question to guard against hanging onto a losing trade.
Let’s remember this…markets go up and down, in different time frames, as Market Psychology changes. As a trader I try to determine whether the market is going up or down within my timeframe. If it’s going up and I think it SHOULD be going up then I’m a buyer. If it’s going down and I think it SHOULD be going up I WAIT…I wait until the market starts to go up or until I change my mind about where I think it SHOULD be going…to do otherwise usually means I’m going to lose money and be psychologically distressed.
For instance…over the past couple of years Gold Bulls have been wrong…they believed that gold SHOULD be going up but it was going down. They got angry, they KNEW they were right and the market was wrong and they kept losing money. Market Psychology has been negative on gold, commodities and commodity currencies…those things have been “out of favor” and stocks have been “in favor.” Since the All Time High in September 2011 gold has fallen ~36% while the S+P 500 has risen ~50%.
Is the stock market “Dangerously Overvalued…and due for a Crash?” Well, I’m pre-disposed to think it’s overvalued, and a sharp correction could start at any time, but I’m not establishing short positions because I think it SHOULD be going down. I’m waiting. I’m missing out on the “easy profits” that I would be earning if I was long the stock market…but since my thinking and the market’s actions are out-of-sync then the best thing for me to do is wait.
I’m pre-disposed to think the stock market is overvalued and at risk of a sharp correction because the current Market Psychology “feels” a lot like it did prior to some of the previous corrections or crashes I’ve lived through over the past 40 years. But just because it “feels” that way doesn’t mean that it’s TIME to get short…the stock market is going up, not down so I’ll have to wait until my “feelings” and the market action are in sync!
This advice is for traders…and may not be appropriate for others. For instance…as a trader I would never buy something just because it’s down 50% from where it used to be…but for someone looking to buy a house to live in (not to flip for a quick profit) a decline of 50% may mean that they can afford to be a buyer…that the price decline created some “value” for them.
But for traders or flippers the advice is pretty clear…buy a market that’s going up, not down…if the market’s action is out-of-sync with your analysis then wait…and if you make a trade and it turns out to be a loser then get rid of it…don’t look for a reason to hang onto a losing trade.
Trading:
EURYEN closed at a 5 year high this week. The weak Yen has been a Key support for equity markets around the world since November 2012 when Market Psychology determined that Abe was going to win the election and begin implementing policies to end two decades of deflation and deflationary expectations in Japan. Since November 2012 EURYEN is up ~40%, the Nikkei is up ~90% and the S+P 500 is up ~33%. The weak Yen and the strong stock market are two sides of the same coin. There is a massive speculative short position in the Yen…just as there is a massive speculative long position in the stock market. If there is a change in Market Psychology the Yen could rally while the stock market falls.

EURUSD has been much stronger than I expected over the past month. I bought USD in late October and sold it for a good profit in early November when the rally struggled around 8150. I bought the USD again in late November but sold it a few days later when it refused to rally. I think the EURUSD should be headed lower but it’s not…I’ll wait.

(Reuters) – China’s annual consumer inflation unexpectedly slowed in November, easing market fears of any imminent policy tightening as authorities meet this week to outline their policy and reform priorities for 2014.
Rising money market rates and bond yields indicate the People’s Bank of China (PBOC) is tightening liquidity conditions, to reduce debt levels and contain credit growth, but there is little sign of a sharp turnaround in monetary policy.
Annual consumer inflation unexpectedly slowed to 3 percent in November from an eight-month high of 3.2 percent, the National Bureau of Statistics said on Monday. Analysts had expected the inflation rate to hold steady at October’s level.
“Inflation will not be a big problem in the coming months and we expect monetary policy to stay neutral,” said Luo Wenbo, an economist at Xiangcai Securities in Shanghai.
….full article HERE
WASHINGTON (MarketWatch) — It’s the last-chance saloon for the Federal Reserve if the central bank wants to send a coordinated message to the markets about tapering.
Three Fed speakers are on the docket for Monday. After that, Fed officials stop talking, at least on the record, until after their Dec. 17-18 meeting.
The Fed is facing a decision on whether to begin to scale back its $85 billion-a-month asset-purchase plan. Economists think the recent strong run of economic data,including Friday’s job report, makes it a very close call on whether the Fed starts to taper.
Patrick MontesDeOca: In a recent interview with Equity Management Academy, Dr. Marc Faber and Patrick MontesDeOca outlined how he believes that central banks around the world, by printing money, are setting up the global economy for collapse.
Faber is the author and publisher of the Gloom, Boom and Doom Report,which highlights unusual investment opportunities, as well as several books on investment. He was managing director of Drexel, Burnham Lambert, and has lived in Hong Kong since 1973.
Faber believes that demand for gold will continue to be high and, if anything will increase. He said, “In Asia it has always been traditional to own gold….It was illegal to own gold in China until about ten years ago. Now the government is actually encouraging people to own gold.” Therefore, he said, demand is “very strong” and, with increasing numbers of wealthy people in Asia, “demand is rising very rapidly.” Furthermore, Faber believes that if the Chinese economy slows down, the government in China will do what governments everywhere else in the world have done, and print money. If that happens, then “gold demand from China would actually increase and not decrease.”

In the long view, Faber discussed that shift in the economic balance of power from the Old World, which is Western Europe, the United States and to some extent Japan to Asia, and especially China. Much of the recent growth in the world economy has been in Asia. However,
Western Central Banks still own about 21% of all the gold in the world, if they still have it, which is “the big question Eric Sprott has raised on numerous occasions” in interviews with EMA and others. China has about $3 trillion in reserves, but only 2% or 3% of it is in gold. Faber argued that if China follows the pattern of other emerging economies, it will slowly increase its gold holdings, which will further increase demand.
….read page 2 – 4 HERE
Ed Note: The prolific Globe Trotting Faber has a batch of other recent other interesting Articles posted to have a look at those that interest you:
- Excess Liquidity boosted big Market cap stocks whereas smaller cap Stocks are reasonably priced
- The Return from Equities will be very muted in the..
- Bitcoins , I have No idea what they Are Worth
- The Stock Market Tends to Rise into Elections
- Faber : Oil Demand to Rise rapidly in China & Indi…
- Marc Faber: Crude Oil is probably among the most attractive Commodities because the supply of Oil could be interrupted at some point
- Money is flowing out of countries like Indonesia, …





