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The True Deficit Reduction Idea

Warren Buffett has his own idea for reducing the deficit. While he was on CNBC, he put it quite bluntly:

“I could end the deficit in 5 minutes. You just pass a law that says that anytime there is a deficit of more than 3% of GDP, all sitting members of Congress are ineligible for re-election.”

Simple idea, but one with merit.  All you have to do is align the self-interests of the politicians with a sound fiscal policy.

It turns out that this exact idea has been put in force within Brazil.   In May of 2000, Brazil implemented the “fiscal responsibility law”.  Some main points of the new law:

  • bans the federal government from bailing out debt-ridden states and cities, as it has done repeatedly in the past
  • it limits federal, state and municipal borrowing and payroll costs
  • bans politicians from leaving their successors a stack of unpaid bills and offenders may be banned from office or even jailed

So how has this plan worked for Brazil?  Judge for yourself:

For those so inclined, you can read the full Brazilian law here:[Download not found]

Posted in Economics, Markets, Politics.

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Ron Paul Versus Bernanke

Paul: Do you think gold is money?

Bernanke: No.

It’s not money?

It’s a precious metal.

Even if it has been money for 6,000 years, somebody reversed that and eliminated that economic law?

Well, it’s an asset. Would you say Treasury bills are money? I don’t think they’re money either, but they’re a financial asset.

Why do central banks hold it?

Well, it’s a form of reserves.

Why don’t they hold diamonds?

Well it’s tradition — long-term tradition.

Well, some people still think it’s money.

In the U.S. anyway, those people are wrong.

 

 

 

Posted in Media.


Learning How to Trade the GDX Fibonacci Butterfly

Guest Post – JW Jones from OptionsTradingSignals

One of the many useful characteristics of options is that the astute trader can design strategies to capture profit from predicted price action forecasts from a wide variety of technical indicators. I think it is helpful to have knowledge of several approaches to technical analysis in order to recognize patterns that other traders may not see.

Today I would like to introduce the topic of a technical pattern that is not commonly discussed and demonstrate its ability to give a high probability trade in a liquid underlying, the Market Vectors Gold Miners ETF, symbol $GDX.

The basis of the trade I would like to discuss is that of a Fibonacci butterfly, in this case, a bearish Fibonacci butterfly. This pattern is derived from price relationships and the proclivity of these relationships to form predictable zones of price resistance and reversals.

The subject of the Fibonacci sequence, its origin, and potential applications is well beyond the scope of this posting. Suffice it to say that the numerical relationships found within the Fibonacci series have wide distributions across a host of natural relationships. For those interested in learning more about these relationships and their derivations, any internet search engine will point to a huge trove of supplementary information.

The Fibonacci butterfly was best described initially by legendary trader Larry Pesavento. It represents one of two well defined Fibonacci reversal patterns that include both the Gartley and the butterfly. For those traders just beginning to wrap their heads around option terminology, I should point out that this butterfly is completely unrelated to the family of butterflies an option trader may elect to use as a trade structure choice. Don’t let your butterflies get confused!

These are reversal patterns and identify high probability areas of change in price direction. The pattern is stereotypical and consists of: an impulsive initial move in price, either up or down, often including gap movement (the X:A thrust) ; retracement of that initial move (A:B counterthrust) to the 0.618 to around the 0.786 Fibonacci level; retracement of that retracement (the B:C secondary thrust); and the final retracement (the C:D counterthrust) which results in completion of the pattern.

The final C:D leg for a butterfly pattern completes when price reaches the zone between 1.272 and 1.618 Fibonacci extension of the initial price movement. Once this final C:D leg has completed within this defined Fibonacci zone, the predicted price movement is in the direction of the initial X:A movement.

It is important to await confirmatory triggers prior to initiating trades from these patterns because these patterns may fail and failed patterns very often lead to explosive moves in the direction of the failure.

Now, if your head has not yet exploded, and you are still reading, it is much easier to understand with a picture.

The horizontal lines with numbers represent the various Fibonacci retracement levels that are important. For this pattern, focus on the B point a bit above the 0.786 retracement of the initial thrust, and the D point of pattern completion between the 1.272 and 1.618 levels. These Fibonacci tools are present in all modern charting packages and make calculation of critical levels instantaneous.
Triggers usually are taken from the next lower time frame. In this case, dropping from the illustrated 60 minute time frame in which the pattern completed, a bearish engulfing candlestick completed on the next 30 minute candle. The bearish trade was triggered.

The next decision was the option structure that would be most efficient to capture the expected move. A major factor to consider in this decision was that the July options cycle was only 9 days from expiration. The worst performing trade was to buy out-of-the-money puts because of the rapid time decay the position would suffer.

I also considered a put butterfly structure, but knew that adverse price action this close to expiration could be difficult to withstand. Remember that butterflies react strongly to price change close to expiration because gamma becomes quite large. Another structure I considered was that of a calendar trade, selling the weekly option and buying the monthly.

In the end, I decided to use the structure of a put vertical illustrated below. In this case I used a conservative structure, buying an in-the-money put, the 58 strike, and selling an at-the-money 56 strike. The chart below illustrates the profit and loss of a spread constructed in a 10×10 (10 Long July GDX 58 Puts / 10 Short July GDX 56 Puts) setup.

The trade did not last long; I closed it approximately 24 hours later on stronger than expected price action and failure to get rapid follow through on the completed bearish butterfly pattern. The result of the trade was a return of 16.5% on invested capital.

Recognition of patterns not routinely followed by the investing herds can often lead to solid risk / reward trades. Using options in a knowledgeable fashion to structure these trades can further increase your probability of success.

 

Posted in Derivatives, Markets, Trading Ideas.

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The Evolving Euro-Crisis

In the past 6 days the Euro has lost 3.6%

Euro breaking out to the downside

The new story is the added pressure on Italy as part of the PIIGS:

Credit Risk - Slip slip slidin'

 

Plan A has been to get all Eurozone members to agree on a bailout package for the weaker members.  So far Plan A has been going terribly.  I would imagine that at the crescendo of the crisis, we will see an option for weaker Eurozone members to quietly leave the Euro…

Posted in Economics, Markets, Politics.

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Noteworthy News – July 11, 2011

Economy:

Manufacturing, 3D Printing and What China Knows About the Emerging American Century – Forbes

More Than 25 Million Americans Are Unemployed Or Can’t Find Full Time Work – NPR

U.S. Payrolls Grow at Slowest Pace in Nine Months as Jobless Rate Climbs – Bloomberg

Rutten: The end of American optimism – LA Times

Drivers Stopping Means Red-Light Cameras Don’t Yield Cash Goals – Bloomberg

Markets:

Why Groupon Is Poised For Collapse – TechCrunch

Oil Prices Climb Back to Pre-Reserve Release Levels – CNBC

World Food Prices Climb on Sugar, Dairy Costs, Stoking Inflation Pressure – Bloomberg

China Raises Interest Rates For Third Time – Forbes

Politics:

Generations of Pork: How Greece’s Political Elite Ruined the Country – Spiegel

QE2 Winners and Losers: How the Fed’s stimulus maneuver helped the rich and screwed the poor – Slate

The president’s failure to demand a reckoning from the moneyed interests who brought the economy down has cursed his first term, and could prevent a second – New York Magazine

Could America go the way of Greece? – CNN

Amazon Taxes Rely on Economic Fallacy – Future of Freedom Foundation

Europe declares war on rating agencies – Telegraph

Banks:

Sheila Bair’s Bank Shot – New York Times


Posted in Economics, Markets, Media, Politics.




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