John Lounsbury
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Percentage of Stocks Above Their 50-Day Moving Averages [View article]
Appreciate the fine research numbers - thanks.
The Dark Side of Dividends [View article]
The CD has no risk to principal and also has no possibility of principal appreciation. If you have no need for capital growth and no fear of inflation, go for the CD. By the way, it is very hard to find a 5% CD right now.
The (Non) Crash of 2008 [View article]
All this is a lot of work but I can hold agressive positions and sleep well at night. Who cares where the market is going? I don't.
FedEx, Royal Bank of Scotland, Tell the Real Economic Story [View article]
1. Dow below 10,000.
2. Dow above 14,800.
3. S&P 500 moving averages (50 day and 200 day both positive, ie moving upward).
What kind of facts would you look at notsosmart? I certainly understand your reaction if you are referring to the opinions of others, including me.
Are Dividend Growth Investors Idiots? [View article]
Don't time the market, but definitely react to what is happening and remain alert to changes of market direction.
FedEx, Royal Bank of Scotland, Tell the Real Economic Story [View article]
Lending Stock to Yourself: Nifty Idea, But Is It Just Active Long-Only Management? [View article]
Oil Hits $140: What Could Trigger a Reverse? [View article]
In 5-10 years we can move significantly toward using solar, wind, geothermal and tidal energy. We have to go there eventually. I say, the sooner the better.
Ultimately, these "natural" energy sources should be much cheaper per kilowatt than burning combustible fuels. Then hydrogen becomes economically attractive for mobile electricity generation in transportation.
Both of the current presidential candidates seem to be aware of these factors. Maybe we will finally get an energy policy that makes economic and environmental sense.
AAII Bearish Reading Above 50% [View article]
Good data summary. I find it useful. Individual investment sentiment for this year looks more like 90-91 than like 2000-02. It remains to be seen if the follow through supports that observation. If one is a student of markets and economic cycles, your article is helpful. If one is looking for specific investment advice that is actionable (maybe this is Murph), this article would be frustrating.
By the way, I am a contributor to the AAII sentiment survey. The week of June 9 was my first bullish input in 11 months; since July 2007 my input had been bearish. I found it curious that my personal switch to bullish coincided with the overall survey falling to more than 50% bearish. I guess there must be two sides in every trade!
"Rubinomics" Is Back, Part Two [View article]
We have taken on debt (national debt) to pay for "living expenses". Economic logic dictates that debt is justified only as investment, when the future return justifies (and retires) the debt. For example, if we increased debt to develop lower cost renewable energy, the debt could be retired with the future savings on energy expense and increased productivity. Only investment with payback should be undertaken.
If a universal health care system saves cost in the total economic system, those savings can be applied against the cost of implementing and running the system. Any remaining debit balance would be paid with taxation and/or user premiums. Any other solution is unsound and digging a deeper pit for our future.
Can sound economic policies be supported by a populace that lives by systematically borrowing from home equity and nearly maxed out credit cards to maintain living style?
Which Solar Stocks Will Continue To Shine? [View article]
Preparing for the Fall [View article]
If you are a long term investor, maintaining a larger than customary cash position is very wise. It is not a bad time to realize some long term capital gains to increase cash. After all, you may not have the current tax environment in the future either. Finally, I agree with the comments others have made about diversifying globally.
Supply-Side Fairy Tales [View article]
The discussion of taxation should center on the equitable distribution of support for the common needs of society with the realization of rewards for risk taking and productive work. Tax policy should concentrate on ensuring the size of the population of the middle class can increase, not decrease as it has in recent years.
Eight Stocks Going Ex-Dividend This Week [View article]
PEG is the ratio of Price/Earnings ratio divided by the earnings growth rate (usually the 3-5 year forward estimate). It may not have importance for a 5-10 day strategy such as dividend capture. I would speculate that there might be a smaller risk of a loss for very low PEG vs very high PEG, but sometimes very high PEG stocks are in a bubble and might keep going higher in the short term. This would be worth a careful study; the downside is that the results would be subject to the rearview mirror criticism.
Contemplating Key Indicators [View article]
Thanks for your observations. I appreciate you sharing your research. So not only do I have to worry about the further collapse of the dollar due to the Fed accepting possible junk as collateral, but now I have to worry about the leveraged effects on stocks when the Fed raises rates and/or stops accepting junk.
No wonder I have become more of a trader than an investor!