Thursday, November 22, 2007

Apathy, Disgust, Fear&Panic, & Anger

Thanks StuyvesantGrad70, thanks TMF(The Motley Fool)

Interview with Century Management’s Arnold Van Den Berg
Outstanding Investors Digest Aug. 2006
http://www.oid.com/public/html/excerpts/CenturyMgmt082006/CenturyMgmtExcerpt2006.pdf
Highlights (starting at page 19):

Buying a Bargain.
Buy contrary to the prevailing sentiment. You never feel good, you have sweaty palms, you are leaning against the crowd, engaging in contrary thinking and you’re pretty much alone. The press is telling you that you’re doing the wrong thing. You better believe in what you’re doing and be disciplined – because otherwise I can guarantee you’re going to get shaken out of your position.

You want to buy stocks that are selling for one of the following four reasons:

Apathy.
Coca Cola dropped 50% and went nowhere for 8 years.
You’re so sick of holding a stock that isn’t making you any money that you’re just tired of it and you want to try something else.

Disgust.
When investors have lost money, or a stock’s gone sideways for a long time, shareholders just want to get rid of it. That’s one of our favorite times to buy our stocks.

Fear and Panic.
People own a stock and they're apathetic about it. Then all of a sudden there’s bad news and it starts going down. That’s the final straw. So they get fearful, they panic, and they sell it. When people are in a state of panic, they’re not thinking rationally. They’re just selling because they’re scared.

Anger.
The ultimate state is anger. There is no emotion that is more destructive than anger – both to your intelligence and to everything else that you do. So anger is the most irrational state. And that’s a wonderful time to buy a stock – when people are so angry at the stock that they want to get rid of it at almost any price.

How We Know We Have a Really Big Winner - when people call us and tell us they’re angry about a stock we’re buying. We know we have a winner because it’s such a contrary indicator.

Tuesday, November 20, 2007

Falling USD and American Woes in Europe

 

(President George W.) Bush hasn't cared at all about what the dollar is worth because he is so provincial. Americans are provincial in general and most of them don't even realize what the dollar is worth overseas."

 

More here: http://www.reuters.com/article/newsOne/idUSL1262142820071119?sp=true

 

 

Thursday, November 08, 2007

Perils of Petrocracy (NYT)

 Today their(LatinAmerican) people are in rebellion against globalization, which promised much but has brought them little. They have been told their countries are rich, but they see they are poor. So someone must be stealing the profits. Most often, nationalization is a reaction to the idea that the thief is a foreign company. For populist leftists, El Petroleo es Nuestro! — the oil is ours — is an alluring slogan

 

Historically, almost every country dependent on the export of oil has answered this question in the same way: badly. It may seem paradoxical, but finding a hole in the ground that spouts money can be one of the worst things to happen to a nation. With one or two exceptions, oil-dependent countries are poorer, more conflict-ridden and despotic. OPEC’s own studies show the perils of relying on oil. Between 1965 and 1998, the economies of OPEC members contracted by 1.3 percent a year. Oil-dependent nations do especially badly by their poor: infant survival, nutrition, life expectancy, literacy, schooling — all are worse in oil-producing countries. The history of oil-dependent countries has produced what Terry Lynn Karl, a Stanford University professor, calls the paradox of plenty.

 

Read more : http://www.nytimes.com/2007/11/04/magazine/04oil-t.html?ei=5070&en=186de2b9cb114a43&ex=1194930000&emc=eta1&pagewanted=print

 

OpenSpace in California and why there will always be fires

And why million $ houses will keep coming up and why they will keep burning down

 

 

Why is there such a huge amount of inflammable vegetation over such a wide area that fires can reach unstoppable proportions by the time they get to places where people live? Because "open space" has become a political sacred cow beyond rational discussion.

The same severe government restrictions on building that drive home prices sky high also lead to vast areas with nothing but trees and bushes. Where it doesn't rain for months, that's dangerous.

No matter how much open space there is, it is never enough for environmental extremists, who will make political trouble if anyone is allowed to break up those miles and miles of solid vegetation with buildings, even though pavement and masonry don't burn

Read more: http://jewishworldreview.com/cols/sowell103007.php3

 

 

Monday, November 05, 2007

Koenraad Elst Interview Sulekha (2002)

http://koenraadelst.voiceofdharma.com/interviews/sulekha.html

 

As for Islam, we might discuss the fate of the Vedic insight Aham Brahmaasmi (I am Brahma) in Islam. In Arabic, Mansur al-Hallaj rendered it as Anal Haqq (I am the Truth), and he was beheaded for it. I suppose thats not what the critics would want to see highlighted either.

 

Its always the same story: Hindus are damned if they do, damned if they dont.

Classic Quote from INDY500

The Indianapolis 500 is touted as "The Greatest Spectacle in Racing." And there's a fascinating quote about what it takes to win the big race at the fabled Brickyard: "To finish first, you must first finish."

 

David Meier, Surviving the Investment Race(http://www.fool.com/investing/general/2007/01/29/survive-the-investment-race.aspx)

 

Music Music Music

The Undertaking

Recently, a very interesting program aired on WGBH on “undertaking”.

 

Mr Thomas Lynch whose profession is “Undertaking” has written a book on the same, for the life of me, cannot remember where I read this line,

 

Funerals are for the Living-The dead don’t care” But, …Thomas Lynch added “The dead do matter”.

 

While I could care less about the latter part of the statement – which is shameless self-preservation after mortal demise of the individual…the first sentence is an all time classic…

 

http://www.boston.com/news/globe/living/articles/2007/10/30/a_middleman_between_life_and_death/

Friday, November 02, 2007

http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/8e8d7af4-8967-11dc-b52e-0000779fd2ac.html

Short term fears –  underestimating cyclical nature of business!

==========================================

At some point, not only will the presidency change hands but the US economy will pass through its trough and start to recover, shifting the interest rate cycle. By that time, European economies could themselves be weakening. There are too many uncertainties to reassure investors at the moment but the current gloom will not last indefinitely.

When secular and cyclical trends come together, as they have now to undermine faith in the US economy, it is a powerful combination. But there is a human tendency at such times to underestimate the degree of cyclicality at work. The US is down but history, including the aftermath of downturns in the 1970s and the early 1990s, shows its tremendous capacity to rejuvenate.

 

Bill Miller (Legg Mason) - Benjamin Graham Quote

Ben Graham's Security Analysis, from Horace's Ars Poetica: "Many shall be restored that now are fallen and many shall fall that now are in honor." (The quote does not say "all" by the way, just "many").

 

http://biz.yahoo.com/prnews/071102/nef041.html?.v=27

 

Aryan Invasion Theory & Koenraad Elst

http://www.hinduwisdom.info/aryan_invasion_theory.htm#Implication%20of%20Aryan%20Invasion%20Theory

 

Koenraad Elst- The Vedic Corpus provides no evidence for the so called Aryan Invasion of India

http://koenraadelst.voiceofdharma.com/articles/aid/vedicevidence.html

 

 

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