






STOCK MARKET
The stock market should present you with a wide variety of NEW hot stocks in 2010.
Many of them are going to be new technology stocks that come from the nanotech, biotech,
financial, healthcare & communications sectors, mining, oil and natural gas resources.
Most of them might seem promising, but the truth is that a good number of these trading
& investing opportunities could be extremely risky, while others are simply not as
good as they look. That's why it's very important to know how to choose among the
best especially if you want to day trade them.
When you know how to pick and approach the best hot stock trading opportunities,
you are able to generate a consistent and respectable amount of money in a very short
period of time.
Experienced day traders recognize that trading hot stocks on momentum can be the
fastest way to make money in the stock market, especially on uncertain times like
these.
You don't necessarily have to trade momentum hot stocks all the time. But you can
learn how to take advantage of them when you encounter the best opportunities for
going long or for shorting them to make money when they are poised to fall down.
If You decide to day trade stocks just keep always in mind that for a trader to survive
and be consistently profitable, its necessary to keep things as simple as possible.
To much confusion and technical indicators will most of the time make you slow in
your decisions and froze you up when a good opportunity is right in front of your
screen.
In the end, stock market day trading is all about picking the best daily stock opportunities
and following your buy and sell signals with ease and simplicity. Once you learn
to master your trading decisions, you can aspire to produce consistent profitable
results. CLICK HERE to learn more
EVENT
World Internet Summit is the ONLY step-by-step internet business event. No other
event in the world dedicates 4 days to teaching people how to create and market businesses
on the internet. Including one day set aside just for "newbies" - where everything
is taken nice and slow. Meaning people remember what they learn.
This is truly going to be an outstanding seminar. Last year's was an absolute sell
out, and this one looks like being the same. 12 of the best internet marketers in
the world are converging for one HUGE weekend. You'll be there, won't you?
Here are
the details of our next big event CLICK HERE for more information.
From Dan Denning in St. Kilda:
--"She broke wind without breaking stride. And that's when I knew something funny was going on in Washington, DC." That's one of the lines your editor used to describe his disillusionment with public policy solving all the world's ills. But first, the markets!
--In case you missed it late last week, Australian's are re-leveraging. While most other households in the Western world are dialling back credit-financed personal consumption, the opposite seems to be happening here. This conforms to almost exactly the same pattern we saw in American in 2006. But first the facts.
--The Big Four Aussie banks used the financial crisis - during which their non-traditional lending saw their securistisation model fail - to expand their control over the Aussie mortgage market from 65% to 75%, according to JPMorgan analyst Scott Manning, via Richard Gluyas in last Friday's Australian. The banks actually grew their loan book in residential housing by $75 billion in the last 18 months.
--Does this leave the Big Four exposed to just one incredibly important asset class? Well at least two of the Big Four might lose some sleep over it at night. Commonwealth Bank has 65% of its loan book tied up in household mortgages, according to Eric Johnston in the Age. Westpac/St. George comes in second with 62% of its assets in the local housing market.
--Because Australian house prices always and only ever go up, this is probably not a problem. But were house prices to go up less fast, or, gasp, even go down, well then it might be a problem. To keep it from becoming a problem, the housing industry must attract a constant stream of buyers and the banks must continue offering them credit. If not, look out below.
--But let's go to the way back machine and recall how it played out in America. The Greenspan Fed panicked in 2001 and lowered the Fed Funds rate 13 times in the next three year until it was just 1% in 2003. These dirt cheap rates triggered the first wave of the U.S. housing bubble: the extension of credit to the most marginal of borrowers in the economy (the subprime and ARM vintage loans that blew up the system in 2007).
--However, as you can see from the chart below, the predatory luring of bad borrowing risks into the market (begun by the Fed, blessed by the banks, and bankrolled by the GSEs) was just the first wave of the boom in mortgage originations in 2004-2006. The second wave was refinancing. You can see that low rates attracted a huge boom in refinancing from existing owners to lock in low rates while they lasted.
--Now comes double-barrelled perplexing news. Just over 37% of March mortgage lending was for refinancing purposes, according to housing statistics firm AFG. The last time it reached that level in Australia was in December of 2008 - another moment when Aussies feared spiking interest rates. The AFG data also show that the Big Four reduced mortgage lending by 82% in March while non-traditional lenders doubled their lending.
--Hmm. What do you reckon is going on here? First the government gooses the market with the first home buyer's grants. The marginal borrower is "brought forward" into the market to keep it going. Then, refi reinforcements are brought into fill the breach as the first buyer's grant expires. Finally, the non-traditional lenders use the securistisation scheme at the AOFM to sell even more mortgages and keep the boom rolling.
--Does this have all the elements of the conditions that led to the peak in U.S. home prices and their eventual collapse? Yes it does! Of course, the banks would never dial back lending would they? Even if their cost of capital is increasing, they wouldn't dare pass that on to Aussie variable rate borrowers, would they?
--Why bother with housing when the market is threatening to bust out over 5,000? Its double bubble, toil and trouble. We think markets are running out of credit and sentiment to make new highs. And any external shock makes the next few months highly susceptible to a big correction.
--The libertarian show in Perth was great. Your editor explained that he first knew something was amiss in Washington when, after giving a speech on the floor of the House of Representatives, a future cabinet member in the Bush administration bustled past him, breaking wind without breaking stride. Right there on the floor of the House chamber.
--We knew then even as a 16-year old that something was wrong. There are free thinkers in Australia and they understand that ideas matter. More on those ideas soon.
Until then!