The best way to see what Rick's Picks has to offer is to examine what we've said in the past. Below are links to archived comments that will give you the flavor of our commentary.
February 01 2008
Despite psychotically wild price swings that are becoming almost routine, the stock market continues to act docilely and more or less predictably when approaching our Hidden Pivot price-reversal points. Yesterday, for instance, in the early minutes of the session, we caught the exact low of a sensational 450-point reversal in the Dow Exchange Traded Fund (ETF) with this trading... » Read more
January 31 2008
Looks like it’s going to be McCain’s race to lose. Now, if only we can tune out the news media between now and next November, since the bilge they will be spewing at us ad nauseum could prove toxic if it continues to flow at the current rate. For now, the story that just won’t flush is that Mitt Romney, with his vast personal wealth, will be... » Read more
January 30 2008
For a stock market that was supposed to be merely marking time yesterday, the hundred-point gain achieved by the Dow was pretty impressive. We expect stocks to ease moderately this morning ahead of the latest credit loosening, and possibly to fall on the “news” itself, since there is almost no possibility of a bullish surprise. After all, what would it take to surprise anyone? A 100-basis-point cut... » Read more
January 29 2008
Could the phony short squeeze that began last week be mutating into a more or less “real,” albeit doomed, rally? It certainly seems like it. We had warned of this when we wrote as follows, referring to the S&P mini-futures: “Yesterday's deftly manipulated short-squeeze had ‘fraud’ written all over it, but that doesn't necessarily mean the rally can't mutate insidiously into the real thing if... » Read more
January 28 2008
The Dow head-faked its way to an undeserved hundred-point gain Friday morning, but it was all downhill after the opening bar. Our prayerful mantra, “Baby needs a new pair of shoes,” was trained on the shares of Citigroup, but the karma just wasn’t working. All it would have taken to get us massively short at... » Read more
January 25 2008
Details of the “stimulus package” led the evening news last night, providing Katie Couric with an opportunity to sound almost as dim-witted as those who are promoting this fiscal dirty bomb. What will it take before one of our network anchors lights upon the unspeakable truth – that the government’s apparent cure for debt deflation is to go another $150 billion into... » Read more
January 24 2008
Could that deafening smacking sound be the lips of a million traders waxing ecstatic over the prospect of shorting into this rally? Three words of advice: Be very careful. Like you, we would absolutely love to get short somewhere near these levels, since it... » Read more
January 23 2008
We’ve never doubted there’s a Plunge Protection Team lurking out there somewhere, ready to do battle with the gravity, but until yesterday we were skeptical The Team would try something so unsubtle as buying stocks hand-over-fist when a selling panic threatened. That’s the way most market-watchers seem to think the PPT operates, and their conspiracy theory is not without merit. One reason it seems... » Read more
January 22 2008
Gold at $10,000 an ounce? Gurus and hard-money advocates have been predicting it for decades, ever since currencies began to seriously decouple from bullion in the 1930s. I’ve been skeptical of such forecasts myself, mainly because my deflationist imagination has always envisioned a world in which... » Read more
January 18 2008
In the bond pits yesterday, there were murmurs and groans of outright despair. “The bond market has already priced in that nobody will ever be able to sell a house again in his lifetime," said Michael Davis, a CBOT trader. "It's not as if there's more bad news that we could factor in fundamentally,” he told a Wall Street Journal reporter. “It's just that the market is taking its cue entirely from... » Read more
January 17 2008
Today’s musings are those of my dear wife Marilyn – a nice change of pace, I hope, from the usual Rick rant. Here’s her very first guest editorial: ... » Read more
January 16 2008
We’ve always maintained that debt deflation would provide few opportunities to get rich and that, moreover, it is likely to challenge even financial geniuses to hold onto a fraction of their current net worth. Indeed, the housing collapse that is now sucking the U.S. economy into a deflationary black hole is not going to work like the dot-com boom... » Read more
January 15 2008
Here’s an unpopular point of view that surfaced yesterday in the Rick’s Picks chat room: “Gold is at the top of a parallel trend channel started from the rally off the 1999 low. The sentiment index is at 95% bulls. The handful of times where the sentiment index has pushed this high over the past decade have all resulted in a market correction, sometimes a... » Read more
January 14 2008
Here’s an unpopular point of view that surfaced yesterday in the Rick’s Picks chat room: “Gold is at the top of a parallel trend channel started from the rally off the 1999 low. The sentiment index is at 95% bulls. The handful of times where the sentiment index has pushed this high over the past decade have all resulted in a market correction, sometimes a... » Read more
January 14 2008
Look out below! The Fed chairman gave it his best shot on Thursday, lying through his teeth about the true state of the economy, but apparently no one believed him. We were surprised ourselves by the stock market’s dismal reaction, since we’d fully expected Wall Street’s Magicians of Manipulation to keep Thursday’s short-squeeze going for at least another... » Read more
January 11 2008
In the chart below, it’s plain to see that DaBoyz lacked the guts yesterday to promote an all-out short squeeze. The S&Ps may have rallied 40 points from their intraday lows, but look at how the top of the rally failed to take out any meaningful highs to the left of it. In Hidden Pivot terms, there is no bullish impulse leg here to get excited about, only little stuff that would be useful merely... » Read more
January 10 2008
When we warned of an imminent 320-point fall in the Dow Sunday night, we admonished subscribers not to share a related S&P target with their friends, lest the publicity “queer” the prediction. We needn’t have worried. Yesterday the S&P futures completed their multi-day plunge, falling to within a quarter of a point of our 1385.25 target; then they trampolined 30 points higher,... » Read more
January 09 2008
Now that’s more like it: Gold way up, stocks way down! Felt right as rain, didn’t it? And to make things even sweeter, we had both sides of the trade nailed, naked-shorting Diamond January 130 calls on Monday’s close (as announced in the Rick’s Picks chat... » Read more
January 08 2008
Call it a failure of the imagination, but we’re hard-pressed to believe that any sane investor would be buying shares these days. Sure, there are always going to be a few ultraviolet-sunny, Kudlowesque optimists capable of deluding themselves into believing that a real estate collapse, hundred-dollar oil, a recessionary surge in unemployment, rampant consumer inflation, terminally diseased bond... » Read more
January 07 2008
Here’s Hillary on the stump, with some egregious dissembling that we could not let pass unremarked: "Of all the people running for president, I've been the most vetted, the most investigated, and -- my goodness -- the most innocent, it turns out," she said to applause. My goodness, what a shameless liar! ... » Read more
January 04 2008
We flatly asserted here a while back that the madrassa-educated Obama didn’t have a prayer, but perhaps we shouldn’t have written him off so easily. For in fact, a prayer is what he does have – millions of them, it would seem, each emanating from the heart of some voter who passionately believes Obama... » Read more
January 03 2008
Three topics are provoking quite a bit of discussion these days among the pundits: 1) the odds of recession; 2) the supposed... » Read more
January 02 2008
Which stocks should we be watching most closely to gauge the health of the economy in the coming months? A year ago we’d have topped the list with Citigroup, which seemed destined to thrive as long as the Fed was in easing mode. However, a glance at the chart below shows that Citi shares have fallen steeply even as monetary policy has shifted once again... » Read more
January 02 2008
Which stocks should we be watching most closely to gauge the health of the economy in the coming months? A year ago we’d have topped the list with Citigroup, which seemed destined to thrive as long as the Fed was in easing mode. However, a glance at the chart below shows that Citi shares have fallen steeply even as monetary policy has shifted once again... » Read more
January 02 2008
Which stocks should we be watching most closely to gauge the health of the economy in the coming months? A year ago we’d have topped the list with Citigroup, which seemed destined to thrive as long as the Fed was in easing mode. However, a glance at the chart below shows that Citi shares have fallen steeply even as monetary policy has shifted once again... » Read more
December 31 2007
If we’d glimpsed 2007’s economic headlines in a crystal ball last December, we would never have imagined that the Dow Industrials would wind up the year within easy striking distance of record highs. The real estate market may be in deep distress and global financial markets profoundly unsettled, but most of us as individuals made it through unscathed. We can only be thankful for this... » Read more
December 28 2007
No sooner had we resigned ourselves to the vertigo-inducing logic of a “Santa Rally” than the stock market surprises by swan-diving from a three-meter height. Talking heads attributed the weakness, as well as the upward skew of bullion and gold quotes yesterday, to Benazir Bhutto’s assassination, but since when have the markets cared about what was going on in the real world, especially when the... » Read more
December 27 2007
Tiresome as yesterday’s price action may have seemed, it nonetheless generated robustly bullish signals for stocks and gold. Both vehicles marginally exceeded bullish price triggers that had been flagged in Wednesday’s Touts section. With respect to the Dow Industrials, we now expect a 500-point rally, presumably... » Read more
December 26 2007
Obligatory year-end mark-ups are bound to push stocks still higher into New Year’s Eve, but don’t expect the Dow to hit new record highs any time soon. That would require a 650-point thrust from these levels, and although a rally of that magnitude would require a trajectory less steep than the short-squeeze that added 700 points to the Industrial Average in the days immediately before and after... » Read more
December 24 2007
It’s snowing like crazy here in Boulder at the moment, promising the whitest Christmas the Front Range has seen in recent memory. For the last week or so the snow has been piling up where it was most desperately needed -- in the drought-parched southwestern corner of the state, near Telluride and Durango. I’ll be headed for the slopes myself shortly to... » Read more
December 21 2007
We spent the day thrashing around in expiring Research In Motion puts and calls, which turned lethal after the close. The stock had climbed steadily throughout the session, settling at 108 with a quite respectable gain of $6 on the day, But that was before news came out immediately after the bell that RIMM had beaten by three cents a supposedly over-the-top street estimate of 62 cents per share.... » Read more
December 20 2007
Saudi clerics have issued what amounts to a fatwa against the dollar, but their efforts might be better spent finding ways to invest surplus petrodollars so that the benefits are felt outside the royal palaces. Officially, the Wahabists called on the Saudi government to fight domestic inflation by decoupling the riyal from the dollar. “We remind you of Prophet Mohammad's words that you are shepherds... » Read more
December 19 2007
The hourly charts continue to hold the key these days to “phenomenally accurate forecasts.” For example, after predicting a 30-point drop in the E-mini S&P futures a few days earlier, we used the 60-minute chart to catch the low of yesterday’s trampoline bounce within a single tick (i.e., a quarter-point). Here is the recommendation exactly as it went out to... » Read more
December 18 2007
Inflationists have always maintained that the Fed would do whatever it takes to prevent the economy from slipping into deflation. How seemingly fortuitous, then, that someone deserving of the nickname “Helicopter Ben” was at the helm of the Federal Reserve when it came time to push monetary expansion to its theoretical limit. Recall that the idea behind a helicopter rescue of the financial system... » Read more
December 17 2007
Comex Gold has been dancing at the edge of a cliff, although it’s not possible to predict quite yet whether it’s going to fall. However, the outlook for bullion could conceivably turn very ugly quickly, since, if the February contract were to dive below 780.40 this week, it would generate a robustly bearish Hidden Pivot signal on the daily chart.... » Read more
December 14 2007
The stock market looked like hell yesterday, considering the announcement that retail sales for November were up 1.2% -- double the “estimate” of alleged economists. Another statistic out yesterday: Producer prices for finished goods jumped 3.2% -- well above the 1.7% estimated by, probably, the same bozos who grossly underestimated retail sales. (Where... » Read more
December 13 2007
Another wild day on Wall Street. Was this the way things felt in the months leading up to the Great Crash? Those were interesting times too – so much so that those who lived them must have sensed it self-consciously, just as we do of our own era. Back then, the U.S. was a relative oasis of political and economic stability. Europe enjoyed no such respite,... » Read more
December 12 2007
Whooooosh! A little disappointment brought stocks down in a huge hurry yesterday. Permabears shouldn’t get their hopes too high...er, low, though, since the nearly 300-point fall in the Dow didn’t violate a single important support on the daily chart. In fact, we’d be surprised if the mass mental illness that... » Read more
December 11 2007
Ahh, another Fed Day has arrived -- and just in time to stimulate a more joyous holiday shopping experience for all of us! Who can guess what kind of zany, utterly mindless reaction will greet the “news” today that virtually every tape-watcher in America has known for weeks was coming?... » Read more
December 10 2007
Years ago, a reporter friend of ours was gathering information for a book he planned to write about Donald Trump. It was during the 1990-91 recession, and even though Trump was still riding high, we told our friend to save the final chapter for a sensational bankruptcy. A few years earlier, SPY magazine had... » Read more
December 07 2007
A 200-point rally here, a 300-pointer there, and before you know it we’re going to be reading about how the Dow Industrial Average is once again at new record highs. We admit it, the prospect just kind of snuck up on us. Not that we would have been the first to notice, so busy were we weeding, watering and... » Read more
December 06 2007
One more thrust and the dollar will record its best rally of the year. We can’t tell you why the buck has strengthened, at least not yet, but our hunch is that it will prove to be just another correction in a bear market now almost six years old. In the meantime, the rally is having a commensurate impact on bullion, and on the price of crude, which has fallen below $90 after flirting with the $100... » Read more
December 05 2007
A guru is not going far out on a limb these days when he declares that the sky is falling. Real estate is in its worst funk since the Great Depression, and even the homebuilders are hard-pressed to say when things might turn around. The scare story of the week concerned a freeze on withdrawals from a Florida investment pool that manages cash accounts for state school districts and local governments.... » Read more
December 04 2007
We always expected the Fed to pull out all the stops when the U.S. economy began to slip into the void, but we never could have imagined the spinmeisters would invent “mortgage welfare” even before recession had been officially declared. Treasury’s latest plan is designed to make it easier for certain ARMs borrowers to temporarily freeze their starter rates to avoid foreclosure. We know the... » Read more
December 04 2007
We always expected the Fed to pull out all the stops when the U.S. economy began to slip into the void, but we never could have imagined the spinmeisters would invent “mortgage welfare” even before recession had been officially declared. Treasury’s latest plan is designed to make it easier for certain ARMs borrowers to temporarily freeze their starter rates to avoid foreclosure. We know the... » Read more
December 03 2007
The stock market’s sociopathic behavior seemed to ebb slightly on Friday, starting with a half-hearted short-squeeze rally that petered out mere minutes after the opening bell. DaBoyz goosed the Dow for 160 points in the early going, but... » Read more
November 30 2007
Yesterday’s forecasts showed no great prescience, since the short-squeeze that we’d expected to kick off the day was nowhere in evidence. Instead, the stock market opened soft and spent the rest of the day navel-gazing. What made the lack of follow-through especially surprising was that Asian stocks had risen sharply Wednesday night following the U.S. stock market’s... » Read more
November 29 2007
Given the stock market’s remarkable surge the last couple of days, anyone reading only the headlines might get the impression that all our economic troubles were behind us – the mortgage crisis, falling home prices, dark clouds of recession, the sickly dollar, etcetera. Alas, all of those problems are still... » Read more
November 28 2007
Think there’s a chance the Dow Industrials will be trading at least one percent lower a couple of months from now? So do we. Now suppose someone was willing to give you 5-to-1 odds that it won’t happen – that the Dow will be at current levels or higher come late January. Would you take that... » Read more
November 27 2007
The stock market’s lazy drift lower turned ugly in the final hour yesterday, demonstrating once again that the Santa factor is no match this year for investors’ unusually severe jitters. The Yuletide effect should have been working at full-strength, given that weekend shopping reports were quite upbeat. (We’re not sure whether to believe these reports ourselves, since,... » Read more
November 26 2007
Extremely light volume allowed DaBoyz to plump up stocks during the traditionally brain-dead-but-buoyant post-Thanksgiving Friday. The short-squeeze added 182 points to the DJIA, recouping exactly half of the losses sustained earlier in the holiday-shortened week. However, we were wholly unpersuaded of... » Read more
November 21 2007
December Gold turned sharply higher yesterday, trampolining $25 from an overnight low that lay within just four ticks of our downside target, a Hidden Pivot. Subscribers will recall that we were expecting the correction to go a bit further last week when the futures were hovering around $793, down $55... » Read more
November 20 2007
Yesterday being the Monday before Thanksgiving, we arose with expectations of the Dow opening a hundred points higher on a gap, then tacking on another hundred points as bears struggled to extricate themselves from the trap. Lo, the Indoos plummeted from the opening bell and were down as... » Read more
November 19 2007
When our bird flu correspondent, Erich Simon, is not immersed in the potentially world-ending details of the pandemic, he sometimes likes to tote up the ways in which gold bugs could eventually profit from the behind-the-scenes maneuvering of bankers and their Friends in (very) High Places. Some... » Read more
November 15 2007
In the past week, Rick’s Picks has been monitoring the put options of a stock that looks extremely vulnerable to an economic downturn.... » Read more
November 14 2007
DaBoyz seized bears hard by their scrota yesterday, hoisting stocks as high as possible in anticipation of the next all-but-inevitable cascade. We fought the tape all day long in the chat room, reminding ourselves as stocks rampaged higher that there still looms for America a debt deflation, a real... » Read more
November 13 2007
The dollar’s feeble bounce yesterday seemed to be all that was keeping the stock market from falling apart. Even so, the Dow Industrials still managed to reverse a 120-point gain and finish down 55 points on the day. Tech stocks continued to tumble, creating a powerful drag on the averages.... » Read more
November 12 2007
Depending on how deep the recession is a year from now, we could easily wind up with Hillary Clinton as America’s first Social Democrat president. With hard times bearing down on us, she’d be able to drop her phony centrist pose and openly embrace FDR, if not yet Karl Marx, as her life’s inspiration. How could any Republican hope to beat her if... » Read more
November 09 2007
To many of those who attempted to trade yesterday, the yo-yo action may have seemed like a game of “fetch” with a dog. You toss the ball as far as you can, Fido brings it back to you, panting for more. You fling the ball even harder the next time. Pooch tirelessly retrieves it, then does it again. And again. And again. And so it went... » Read more
November 07 2007
You don’t need to be a chartist to feel the weight the Dow Industrials have imposed on bulls of late. Imagine that the enhanced, red price bar is a surfer intent on paddling over the gathering swells. They are so high, however, that he would not be able to even see the top of the first, let alone the scary crests mounting behind it. Again, thinking... » Read more
November 06 2007
The Dow Industrials rallied to finish a hundred points off their lows yesterday, suggesting Wall Street half-believes Citigroup and Merrill Lynch are the only financial players in the too-big-to-fail category with daunting problems. After the close, The Wall Street Journal reported that “the markets wobbled amid continued investor concern... » Read more
November 05 2007
Comex Gold blew past $800 with such winning ease on Friday that perhaps it’s not too early to start thinking of the supposed barrier as support rather than resistance. We wouldn’t want any cockiness on our part to jinx the next thrust, to an expected $907, but gold bugs have reason to be optimistic that this threshold will soon be reached for the first... » Read more
November 02 2007
Reality won a rare round on U.S. stock exchanges yesterday, but permabears should ponder the chart below before whooping it up too deliriously. Notice that on a day in which the Dow Industrials fell by a whopping 362 points, the QQQs were down less than a point, settling a hair lower than Wednesday’s bottom. In... » Read more
November 01 2007
The Fed eased yesterday while admonishing investors not to expect any more. Yeah, sure. Like a spoiled kid, Wall Street has learned that it can get whatever it wants from the central bank by whining, sulking, and feigning pain. Wanna bet that by this time next month, traders will have priced in a near-certain... » Read more
October 31 2007
Tasked with dragging the U.S. stock market higher all by itself, Google could not quite get the job done yesterday. Although the stock ended the session with a nearly $15 gain, preventing Nasdaq-based indexes from falling, the Industrial Average went its separate way, closing with a 78-point loss. Given that the stock market’s illusion of strength is all that is keeping the U.S. economy from going... » Read more
October 30 2007
This could turn out to be quite the week, what with Gold fixing to catapult past $800, crude oil within easy striking distance of $100/barrel, and the Fed cooking up a speedball (aka, a “Belushi”) to resuscitate credit addicts for a new round of binge buying. There was a time when Wall Street might have show signs of nervousness ahead of such... » Read more
October 29 2007
We’ve long assumed that a collapsing dollar would take the global economy with it, but perhaps we were being too pessimistic? After all, the Dollar Index has fallen by 36 percent since 2002, but life goes on. Moreover, when the greenback slipped to historical new lows on Friday, hardly anyone seems to have... » Read more
October 26 2007
The Nasdaq index has been slithering sideways for nearly two weeks, so you might as well flip a coin if you’re keen on betting which way stocks are finally going to break, up or down. And forget about forming any strong opinions before the close, since that’s unlikely to produce better results than a coin-toss.... » Read more
October 25 2007
Although we began yesterday long some QQQ puts and intending to hold them till Armageddon, we had second thoughts when sellers lost heart early in the session. The Dow was down 200 points at the time, but the blue chip average was clearly struggling to fall any further. After exiting the puts for a modest profit, we went back to spectating. In retrospect, the only place where the world seemed... » Read more
October 24 2007
Bosox caps and T-shirts are everywhere -- even here in Colorado, where Rockies fever has built to a crescendo. Of course, Yankees logos are everywhere too. But it’s not the same thing. People wear Yankees caps and shirts for many reasons other than to advertise their loyalty to the team. For instance, Hillary... » Read more
October 23 2007
Surely a stock market trading near record highs and apparently in love with the housing bust, a looming recession, a collapsing dollar, $100 oil and the prospect of Hillary Clinton as our next president can shrug off lousy third-quarter earnings, right? We had our doubts, especially when we saw the S&P futures getting savaged Sunday night, continuing the... » Read more
October 22 2007
Inches from despair, battered and bruised by a stock market maniacally on the rise, we’d nearly given up hope of enjoying a “fun” expiration day any time soon. Boy, were we ever wrong! The Dow took an exhilarating 370-point plunge on Friday as October puts and calls breathed their last – and for a few glorious... » Read more
October 19 2007
What the hell do Apple and Google care whether oil hits $100 a barrel? The shares of both companies pushed intrepidly higher yesterday even as the price of crude approached $90 for the first time. If quotes were eventually to reach $300 a barrel, we’re sure stock market bulls would find umpteen... » Read more
October 18 2007
Even with a crystal ball it would be tough to make money trading options on such popular vehicles as the Diamonds and QQQQs. That’s because, when you are buying puts and calls on these securities, you are trading mainly against very smart machines, not people. If you were to monitor price fluctuations in QQQQ and Diamond (DIA) puts and calls... » Read more
October 17 2007
Once again, stocks failed to recoup the day’s losses with that closing-hour stampede of short covering that has become a tradition on the NYSE. We’ve grown so accustomed to the Daily Goosing ourselves that when it fails to occur, as was the case in the last two days, we start to worry that something is amiss. But what? Why would Wall Street bulls... » Read more
October 16 2007
An odd day for sure. The birds were agitated and the dogs were barking, and yet…no earthquake. Around mid-morning, with the DJIA off about 160 points, we would have given odds that the blue chip average would finish the day either down 250 points, or unchanged due to a short-squeeze in the final hour. In fact, neither occurred. The Industrial Average... » Read more
October 15 2007
We continue to view Thursday’s sharp selloff on Wall Street as little more than the beginning, and end, of a fleeting shakeout -- one intended to bring stocks down to levels where they can be accumulated at cut rates by Da Boyz before the scoundrels goose shares once again, renewing an all but endless, and seemingly virtuous, cycle of asset inflation. The bullish case is buttressed by several... » Read more
October 12 2007
I spent yesterday in a Denver courtroom, blissfully beyond the reach of the brain-devouring virus that evidently has afflicted Wall Street in recent months. I was there in support of a friend, Bill S., whose seventh DUI had landed him in jail for a year. Now he was back in court trying to get the sentence reduced, encouraged by his lawyer to think the... » Read more
October 11 2007
With the Dow Industrials down 165 points yesterday, the Nasdaq index and the puts we held on it were in a bullish warp – so much so as to prevent our taking even a small a partial profit. We usually advise doing so early on in each trade, so that even if we are stopped out there will be no loss, not even a small one, after commissions. In this instance,... » Read more
October 10 2007
Take it from a hard-core permabear: This market is going higher – possibly much higher. We edged our forecast for the Dow Industrials up to 15175 a while back, even as we were telling you that the real estate sector is about to become a Depressionary bog. Are these... » Read more
October 09 2007
Two bellwether stocks, Apple and Google, exceeded challenging Hidden Pivot rally targets yesterday, hinting that they will lead the broad averages higher for at least the next several days. For more than a week, we’d been looking for Apple to reach a minimum 164.22 and Google to hit 602.04. After climbing to... » Read more
October 08 2007
I’ve been a Colorado Rockies fan for exactly a week, having jumped on their bandwagon just as the excitement was starting to build here in Denver last weekend. A pair of skybox tickets for the second of three games against the Diamondbacks dropped into my wife’s lap, and so there we were at Coor’s Field last Saturday night, feasting on brats and beer, and... » Read more
October 05 2007
Microsoft’s Halo 3 has racked up $300 million in sales in its first week – no small accomplishment for a company that has yet to put out a decent Media Player after eleven tries. Maybe it’s because all of the good ideas contained in Halo, as well as the code, came from outside... » Read more
October 04 2007
So, the Street supposedly believes the worst of the credit crunch might be over. We’d say that’s a tad optimistic, considering the real estate sector is still weakening and likely to deteriorate even further because of the huge backlog of unsold homes. Regardless, DaBoyz evidently are going to need a story with more sizzle to re-ignite the short-squeeze that has provided nearly every... » Read more
October 03 2007
With a “Hillbilly Smackdown” featured on Jerry Springer yesterday, it’s a wonder anyone was trading stocks. We gave it a try ourselves, attempting to “work” a backspread position in Citigroup, but the stock was untradable as it vibrated within an 8-cent range most of the day.... » Read more
October 02 2007
Who ever said DaBoyz don’t have a sense of humor? Even those of us who were on the wrong side of the trade got a good laugh yesterday when Citi shares went bonkers on word that the subprime mortgage debacle and a few related problems had cost the banking colossus nearly $6 billion in the last quarter. The news... » Read more
October 01 2007
The silence that has greeted the dollar’s collapse is eerie. You don’t have to be an old-timer to remember when such an event would have been news. Not any more, though. Maybe it’s because no one really understands what a falling dollar means, other than that a hotel breakfast of juice, toast and eggs now costs upwards of fifty dollars in London and... » Read more
September 28 2007
Yesterday’s snooze fest was not without historical purpose, since the pause will allow the Dow Industrial Average to set a new record high on a Friday -- a theatrical flourish that we could have expected. The Indoos settled yesterday at 13913, meaning they will have to rack up only a further 109 points this morning to achieve the milestone. The only question is whether the blue chip average... » Read more
September 27 2007
Another rancid Whoopee Cushion breeze set Wall Street’s pennants aflutter yesterday. And forget about profiting from these stupid little rallies, since they are pretty much over before your data software has drawn more than a bar or two on the three-minute chart. Occasionally there are going to be variations. Like yesterday. There was the... » Read more
September 26 2007
The chart below shows what the Fed is up against in trying to resuscitate a U.S. economy already dangerously glutted with debt. The dip at the right edge reflects a decline in money velocity to multiyear lows. What it implies is that the “multiplier effect” of fresh credit is not working with nearly as much... » Read more
September 25 2007
Talk about investment hubris getting pumped to the max! Listen to what one market veteran, Amanda Sharp, told a reporter from the Wall Street Journal recently: “If we were to get a crash or correction, there would be a nice cleaning out,” she says. Would that we all shared Ms. Sharp’s brash confidence as we await... » Read more
September 24 2007
We’re convinced that no amount of monetary stimulus can revive the real estate boom at this point, even if the Fed seems determined to try. But suppose we’re wrong and home prices take off again? Does anyone actually believe that that would lead the economy back to health? Of course not (Larry Kudlow aside). It would simply postpone a debt deflation that by now has become as likely as…the next... » Read more
September 21 2007
After pickpocketing widows and pensioners yesterday via a fleeting head-fake on the opening, DaBoyz turned Citi shares sharply south, wiping out half of the ill-gotten gains achieved two days earlier via a very nasty short-squeeze. The stock’s 2.5 percent drop does not bode well for the market as a whole,... » Read more
September 20 2007
Is the Dow on its way to new all-time highs? We wouldn’t bet against it at the moment, having exited a short position in Citigroup the other day just before it and a whole bunch of other stocks took off. A global leader in the smoke-and-mirrors business, Citi seemed like a perfect proxy for a stock... » Read more
September 19 2007
Although it was no trick to see yesterday’s Fed-induced short-squeeze coming, it took imagination to anticipate its rabid ferocity. We had advised shorting into any buying panic because it was bound to end with the question “Okay, what now?” hanging over Wall Street. And so it has, probably, even if it takes a few more days for the lack of a satisfying answer to that question to... » Read more