
Monday, June 23, 2008
SKF

Sunday, June 22, 2008
Uruguay Real Estate
It's been said before, but I'll say it again -- Uruguay will probably not see the kind of declines being seen in the US -- at least not right away.
The reason?
Mortgage Debt in Uruguay
While not unheard of, it's pretty rare. Only very recently have banks started to dip their toes back in the water. And, most famously, it is the bank 'Banco de la Republica Oriental de Uruguay' (BROU) that has the explicit (i believe) backing of the central bank of Uruguay that has begun offering loans in particular situations.
However, these are not the kind of high-risk loans that we saw in other parts of the world in the first part of this decade. They don't have to. There is little to no competition. The LTV, or loan to value, scores are pretty conservative and they are being made primarily to people who have nearly guaranteed lifetime employment through government and quasi-governmental agencies here. Could these peoples' employment and income prospects change? Of course. But one has to rate the risk as "low" compared with the turbulent employment markets up north....at least for now :)
Price of Homes in Uruguay
All that said, buying a house in the city of Montevideo or nicer parts of Punta del Este is still much much too expensive for the average Uruguayan to afford -- even on dual incomes. That is a problem. Because either the price of homes must be supported by an outside source -- foreign incomes, governement money, multi-nationals, expats, and foreign government money -- or they must revert to an affordable level as well.
Buying a House in Uruguay
Because of this divergence in where the "average" Uruguay Real Estate buyer derives his income or wealth, it's pretty difficult to talk about "one market" in Uruguay -- even in a country this small with only 3.5 million inhabitants.
The Interior
The Interior of Uruguay is anyplace away from the coastline. The drivers are much less reliant on expat, foreign influx, multinational buyers and domestic government and much more reliant on farming.
The price of homes in the interior will probably be driven primarily by the availability of borrorwed money and the price of Uruguayan beef (and other ranching and farming exports) and availability of open and available markets for what it is the interior produces. Since lots of Uruguayan campos feed their cattle primarily grass, they've been spared some of the incredible inflation in feed costs. However, all of the other inputs are apparently skyrocketing and Uruguay still has to ship its cattle a long ways to reach the North American, European, or Asian markets.
Montevideo Real Estate
As I said earlier, montevideo real estate is out of reach of the "average" Uruguayan's income level. However, many of the inhabitants of Montevideo live comfortably OVER the average income of the typical Uruguayan. In addition, a much larger percentage of the higher paid governament and large multinational employees work, earn, spend, invest and live in the Uruguayan capitol.
Punta del Este Real Estate
Punta del Este Real Estate -- I have to admit to being no expert on Punta del Este. However, here is my general take. It's become a very large beach resort community. Very few (actually) off season inhabitants live in punta del este year around relative to the size of it's January visitors.
That said, a large large number of visitors there have vacation homes either in the form of apartments, or entire houses. Many of the residences owned by your "typical" Uruguayan are also investment properties for at least part of the holiday (summer) season. Rates for "nice" rentals are in extremely high demand, not just from Uruguayans, but also many Brasilians, and Argentinians come from southern Brasil and Buenos Aires to enjoy Uruguay's beaches, casinos, nonstop night life, and relative safety. Rental rates for the two busiest months of high season can nearly cover the entire cost of maintaining the property for the year....Which is good because after summer ends, demand and asking prices nosedive and vacancies soar.
At this point Punta del Este is in the process of reaching critical mass, where a good portion of its visitors are from somewhere else in the summer. Financial problems impacting European's willingness to take winter vacations, or international tensions with brasil or argentina effecting travel across the Uruguayan border can slow Punta del Este's momentum, but probably only slightly for now.
Uruguay Real Estate Agents
As an expat, or foreigner looking at Uruguay real estate most experienced players will tell you that it is "caveat emptor". Real Estate agents have no formal licensing process and so honesty and disclosure and moral compasses will run the gamut among the agents you are likely to run across.
The transaction costs will run you in the neighborhood of 10%, and the fact that there is no real "MLS", (multiple listing service), and no central repository of closing prices available to the public (that I'm aware of) it can make price discovery a bit challenging.
Unfortunately, if you are newbie here, you are going to have to work with *someone* so pick your poison. It's probably wise though to follow the advice of people that have gone before you and "never trust anything your realtor says". That is not to say that they are intentionally lying to you, but when it gets into more complicated matters like easements and land use restrictions it may be that they just don't know.
For instance I've noticed some lovely stately homes in the neighborhood I live in bordered by 10 story apartment buildings. And, when I say, 'bordered", I mean sharing a wall. How would you like to move in right before that two years of constructions, not to mention sayin "good bye' to the sun. Zoning, for one thing, is a lot more liberal here....just one thing that you're probably not contemplating when you find your new home.
Uruguay Guy
Wednesday, June 11, 2008
Sia Furler
Today, Sia Furler. A towering talent.
granted i'm in uruguay, but why is it that i know that paris hilton and lindsey lohan have released albums and i never heard of this girl until the other day surfin' youtube?
anyways, here is her signing some 4/6 time blues live in a radio studio.
the clip is a little squirrely because it starts with the end of the previous song in her set. hang in until the 1 min mark to see if she's your "cup o' tea". enjoy
U.G.
Sunday, June 08, 2008
A Beautiful Soul, A fUgly Mug
Many of fuBarrio's friends and family - typically reclusive characters - were in attendance.
fuBarrio's only son, pictured below gave a stirring eulogy, that in typical fasshion, glossed over fuBarrio's many and varied flaws.

In addition, fuBarrio's daughter regaled fuBarrio's generosity. She even recalls when he accidentally tipped over 7% at a restaurant due to a calcuation error...He realized it while in the parking lot and reluctantly decided not to go back in and demand change.

fuBarrio's friend, clyde, amused guests at the reception afterwards when he did an impression of fuBarrio after going into diabetic shock after consuming too many twinkies in a manic binge after Ben Bernancke used tax payer money to back bad debts of Bear Stearns for JP Morgan

fuBarrio's brother who despises crowds, people, flying and ceremonies made the sacrifice to make a special trip out
Fubarrio's uncle Ted drank a little too much of the Patricia Stout and spent the majority of the reception "sleeping it off".
The importance of the event even brought out fuBarrio's boss, who admits to hating "these kinds of get togethers"
Most guests seemed unwilling to discuss the suspicious nature surrounding fuBarrio's death, or were feigning ignorance as to the circumstances surrounding his untimely demise.
While police have not been able to rule out "foul play" surrounding the death of fuBarrio for now it is being attributed to natural causes.
"Look, that mutt had a big mouth, and an unforgettably fugly mug. That's not going to make you a lot of friends, so it's a little early to rule anything out" said Ernest Bauman, the detective in charge of the investigation.
Saturday, June 07, 2008
fuBarrio Services Scheduled for Sunday

Services for the enigmatic "devil dog" known as fuBarrio have been scheduled for this Sunday. At the request of the public health department, it will be a closed casket ceremony.
"Hey, there are going to be little children there," the Montevideo Director of Health and Human Services was reported as saying. "I mean, there's no reason to traumatize people."
Curiously, fuBarrio reportedly has never looked better. "I don't think I've ever seen him so peaceful. I guess it took his death to release his twisted view on life out of that poor corpse," Golden Lotus, his long-time caretaker, said during a press conference.
At the request of "conspiracy theorists" worldwide who followed fuBarrio's paranoid rants, authorities have not ruled out 'foul play' in the death of fuBarrio. A complete autopsy has been ordered however, results have been delayed after the medical examiner assigned the fuBarrio case quit under protest of inhumane working conditions.
Thursday, June 05, 2008
FuBarrio Dies
fuBarrio had been on death watch ever since Hillary Clinton lost a string of disappointing Democratic primaries in the US presidential election.
No stranger to controversy, fuBarrio will probably be remembered best for his acerbic wit, his utter unwillingness to use spellcheck, and a penchant for saying really stupid opinionated things. While not noted for accomplishing anything in his short twisted miserable life, fuBarrio lobbied tirelessly for the abolition of the US Federal Reserve, a return to sound money policies, and the irradication of pop artists who don't write their own music. Needless to say, the fight for his dream will continue on by those he inspired after his passing.
Friends and family (both of them) have tentatively scheduled private services on Sunday for those wishing to celebrate the life and times of fuBarrio. Anyone wishing to honor fuBarrio's memory may make a donation to the Hostess, Dr's against Diabeties, Foundation in fuBarrio's name.
Hey 19
In two thousand-seven
....etc etc.
ok, i think the line is actually "sixty-seven"
They are buying dollars for 19 pesos even at a bunch of the cambios yesterday...in fact at some of the cambios the spread is an entire peso....5% spread between the bid and ask -- good grief -- we're not talking about airport exchange houses. I'm talking about downtown.
So, what does that mean? Well, since I got here, and the exchange between the US dollar and the Peso was around 24, it's down a bit over 20%.
Since the "crash" when it went into the 30's...hmmm....
The really shocking thing is the last little move took place at a time when the dollar was strengthening against gold and some of the other euro and asian currencies. Perhaps south america is gettin ready to extend its move to the upside.
Really aggravates and already inflationary situation for expats living off of US dollars here.
Ciao for now
Saturday, May 31, 2008
"7 Minute Abs" and the Offshore Bank Account
For those that were living in a cave, or avoid pop culture like the plague, there is one of many somewhat disturbingly funny scenes where the protagonist picks up a hitchhiker on a boring road trip from R.I. to Florida.
While striking up a conversation, the hitchhiker tells the protagonist about his brilliant new business idea.....to strategically undercut the somewhat famous and successful exercise video, "8 Minute Abs"
His idea? "7 Minute Abs"
("and if for any reason your unsatisfied, we'll give you the eight minute, for free")
Anyways, in my "day job" we realized that one of the impedences to moving money offshore, or opening an offshore bank account was the incredibly complicated and hassle filled procedure for doing so. So we created an "idea" -- an online application process that started you through the process of applying and getting your documentation together.

We even registered some URLs like 8minuteoffshore and eightminuteoffshore....We haven't used them yet, but we do use, "Get an Offshore Account in 8 Minutes." in a lot of our google ads and on our homepage.
Taking a page out of the "There's Something About Mary" psycho-hitchhiker playbook, mortgage and banking giant Washington Mutual one-upped me and went with this campaign :)

ciao,
fuBarrio
Tuesday, May 20, 2008
South American Time
By "South American time" I'm talking more specifically on the value that Uruguayans receive and place on their individual time. Without characterizing it as "unvalued", let's just say that most Uruguayans and Uruguayan institutions place a low *monetary* value on each others time.
While this can be a pleasant suprise when you need to call a plumber to your house and he charges you $10 for his time. Or, when you want a bag of chips and a coke from the corner market and they will deliver it to your door for no additional charge (!) Or when you see people leisurely taking 2 or even 3 hour lunch breaks....
....it can also spill over into some areas where you'd like to have your OWN time valued :) ...like waiting on queue at the bank like it's payday in a mill town in the early 70's (before ATMs) or you are trying to get a job here and you realize the pay here is pretty lame.
In the US especially, you have a huge commercial arbitrage opportunity that has creeped into the entire culture -- you pay for "convenience" -- (which usually means time/hassle savings).
If you want to go cheap, you herd into planes in groups (SouthWorst), you park in gninormous lots and mil through warehouses in the 10's of thousands of square feet for ketchup and tubesocks (walmart, costco).
If you want to go "pay up" one of the big tangible benefits is time savings -- you go first class and get a different security line (or a private jet and avoid it altogether), or you go to the "convenience store" and pay 2x what the same food costs in larger less convenient groceries with lower margins and higher volumes.
In Uruguay, the corner markets (mini-marts) have the same prices as the supermarkets.
In Uruguay, those services which would typically be premium in the North, are often not available, not necessary, or costs the same as the "inconvenient" or "slow" way.
curious,
fuBarrio
Tuesday, May 13, 2008
Anonymous Investment Accounts
Yeah, there's an orginal thought - NOT! :)
Well, there are a -few- flaws with that theory. In fairness the "grand plan" started taking shape around the beginning of the tech bust (2001-ish) and really solidified when i calculated how much i was spending in property tax alone on my bay area home of 1930 construction.
The first flaw was that I had *wrongly* assumed, "hey since I don't live in the US, I won't owe any US taxes" -- (survey says.......bzzzzzttt!)
As it turns out, there IS a tax exemption for those who live outside of the country, but it is only available on the first 80,000 dollars and it is available for earned income only. Although god knows, when you trade as poorly as I do every wretched dollar you pry from the market's stingy grasp is clearly 'earned' the IRS and the US government doesn't see it the same way.
To get around this little "glitch" in my plan, i would need to create a complex structure which attempted to trade the assets as an entity and pay me a salary. It's all entirely doable, but after spending a year or more longer after the end of my employment in the US waiting on Golden Lotus' schooling -- and our lease to be finalized, I wasn't as fat as I had wanted to be and the prospect of paying mid 5 figures to get a tax advantaged structure setup and administered properly didn't seem that appealing to me.
Yes, you can get it done cheaper, but after all the horror stories I'd heard about with people being hit with back taxes and fees and penalties owed that they thought they had legally avoided, it seemed like one of those things that i didn't want to scrimp on.
(The second, more subtle problem with my plan was that even in places advertised as "cheap", unless you are going to live in a yurt and sew your clothes with thread made from animal blubber and yak hides, chances are, trying to replicate 1st world conveniences are going to cost you more than you estimated. The falling dollar and domestic (UY) price inflation hasn't really helped matters either.)
What makes matters more frustrating for the little guy is that foreigners who invest in the same north american markets pay no cap gains taxes. This of course extends to "offshore entities", hedge funds and the like which use the anomolies created by all the sheeple attempting to manage their tax bite each year to catch some relatively predictable and profitable trades around the end of the calendar year.
What I thought was that what the world really needed was a way for the "little guy" to move his money offshore, AND be able to make his money still work for him.
When I looked into it there were a few guys offering "managed futures accounts" and "managed forex accounts". To me, these just looked like sophisticated ponzi schemes, or trading schemes that I equate to "picking up nickels in front of steam rollers" -- for instance selling volatility -- a trade that works really well to give you 4-5% a month or so, until you get your head handed to you and take a massive draw down in the 6th or 7th month effectively wiping all your gains and then some.
What I really wanted was an affordable flexible platform that would allow me to trade offshore like the big boys without the big boy expenses. Hey, if you're managing $1Billion dollars or so, the cost of setting things up properly can be pretty easily handled within the realm of your hedge fund's 2+20% management fee.
If however, you are like fubarrio and your networth amounts to a couple of nickels, some jujubeads and some pocket lint, then a few 10 thousands here and there adds up.
What I learned in the course of joining the offshore industry is that the hick-up is with the brokers. They are all obligated to follow and adhere to the exchange's rules. And, one of those rules is that while money can sometimes go into a brokerage account with one name from a bank account with another beneficial owner, it can't go back out that way. So, it's kind of like the roach motel in that regard. Incoming wires are (sometimes) OK, but moving the money back out to an account with a different named owner is a big no-no.
So what happens is, through a series of mandatory disclosures, the brokerage accounts make sure that they know who the beneficial owner of their account is, and offshore company holders need to have banking setup for their offshore company -- something that is not nearly as trivial as it used to be years ago.
By getting the banking lined up through our offshore financial company, we were able to setup anonymous investment accounts for clients of my offshore banking house.
How?
Well, technically, the account is held in the name of the offshore banking house and the accounts are run through subsidiary companies of the offshore banking house in sub accounts -- which are under the master account.
The client clears due diligence, know your customer (KYC) rules with the offshore financial company, and he or she is automatically good to go with their segregated offshore trading account -- all the while maintaining their anonymity.
It's brand new, so I'll keep you updated as to how it ends up working out. I'm still waiting for some nerd from compliance to puff up and tell us we can't do what we're doing....right about the time we are really getting rolling :)
I'm not actually "eating my own dog food" yet, in that all of my investment/trading money is firmly "onshore" where the tax man (IRS) and everyone else that cares knows where it is when it comes time to pay for all these baby boomer retirements :)
Happy Investing and Trading,
fB
Tuesday, April 01, 2008
Black Tuesday Redux - April 22, 2008
Gold was crushed.
The dollar soared.
Financials - yes, FINANCIALS - were "en fuego"
Despite my recent hypothesis that we were due for a (temporary I was thinking) trend reversal, and my attempts to position around this trend reversal, I got a pretty significant haircut today in pretty much all my "core" position trades. And, from the looks of my picture, you can see that the last thing fuBarrio needs is another haircut!
All kinds of technical resisitance levels were violated and blown out of the water.
Transports (yes, TRANSPORTS -- those guys paying $4/gallon in diesel) were spiking higher and looking very threateningly "bullish".
What caused the mini-boom?
Who knows.
On the news front UBS announced a MONSTER writeoff -- $12B or so this quarter. Anounced the chairman was stepping down...and oh yeah, they were creating a separate entity to offload all their "bad paper" into. Hmm...heck, sounds bullish to me!
Lehman Bros. raise convertible preferred in a separate stock offering which pays a higher divvie, and dilutes the current stock holders. Event though they've assured us multiple times in the past couple weeks that they have 10s of billions in cash and assets easily convertible to cash....so why did they need to raise more money? things that make you say, "hmmmmmmmm....."
Thornburg Mortgage narrowly avoided chapter 11 by raising over a billion dollars in cash on a bond offering (or convertible preferred i forget which) with a return to investors of over 18% return -- I'm not exactly sure how a company writing mortgages in the 7% area, and has a cost of capital of 18%+ makes money. I guess they'll "make it up in volume" (?) -- stock spiked higher on the news of course.
So.....what's a "bear" to do?
It certainly makes no sense to get caught on the wrong side of the trade (whether it's a true resumption of the bull or just a bear market rally). The old saying is, the market can stay irrational longer than you can stay liquid....or something to that effect.
However, after some meaningful analysis of star charts, tea leaves, chicken entrails, and hemlines....(the hem-lines have no meaningful analytical value pertaining to economics...fubarrio just likes analyzing them)....I've come to the following conclusion:
On or about the fourth Tuesday in the Fourth month in the eight year of the third millenium......(i just said it that way to make it sound more "numerology-ish"...I'm talking about april 22nd) there will be a rise in the "fear" surrounding wall street.
Leading into this day (on or about) there may be a gradual and slowly building fear....that part is unclear.....however, on or about april the 22nd there will possibly be an "event" that will lead to a flight to quality (selling of speculative securities).
While we are still looking to what kind of briefcase Ben Bernanke takes with him to testify before Congress tomorrow for full confirmation, the chicken entrails also point to the third week of May as also very significant. However, the tea leaves point to the next week or two as being your last best chance to sell into the rallies, since the drawdown in the third week of May will be preceded by the breakdown on or about the 22nd of April.
(By way of full disclosure other "more sophisticated analysis" - or so they claim - that involves communing with the dead thinks a powerful rally will take us into the "middle of the summer").
As the volatility decreases (usually caused by rising or sideways movin stock prices), I will be buying put options (bets the market is going down) with expirations in June or July.
All April Fool's jokes aside, there isn't a shred of real hard fundamental or technical analysis that backs this "feeling" up (at least none i can share with you). So, please don't take any of this as "financial advice". It is merely the rantings of a crazed, wounded, hideous, animal....
....but, if you were already thinking about lightening up on US equities anyways....this week wouldn't be the WORST time to move to the sidelines for a while.
in Gold news....it's sitting right over the 100 day moving average right now. Some people think it breaks under as early as tomorrow....which would prob mean more dollar strength....I don't know. The big number everyone is watching is the 200 day moving average....this is under 800 i believe. If it hits that and bounces the bulls alive. If not, it could be a long summer for the gold bulls.
ciao,
fuBarrio
Friday, March 21, 2008
The Inflation vs. Deflation Debate - The Greater Depression
While, there seems to be an "argument" between the "deflationary" malaise (1930's US, 1990's Japan) and "inflationary" (1970's US, Gernam Weimar Republic 1920's) camps, I have been careful to try to walk in both worlds.
(technically, inflation is creation of new money (or credit) -- deflation is removal of said money or credit. In this case I'm talking about "price inflation" which is a symptom of the former)
My feeling was that:
asset prices (stocks, non govt bonds, real estate) would deflate, while the price of things that you need to live your "everyday life" would inflate.
The idea was that the availability of money for assets would disappear -- and drive down the ability of people to speculate in them. Meanwhile, the Federal Reserve, in trying to maintain the status quo of high asset prices would create additional liquidity. However, that liquidity would find a home chasing "things that the Chinese and Indians are buying" -- commodities and the raw material inputs for a society growing into "first world" status.
So far, whether that was the real reason that things have played out as predicted or not, that has worked out. However, this week, for some reason, the "wheels" came off that trade.
What happened to my account balance?
With this background in place I want to talk about what I saw in the markets today. Financial stocks were whipsawing wildly. Commodities, and commodity stocks were all under severe pressure most of the entire week.
While it's probably more important (and often smarter) to just follow the markets and not try to understand what is going on in the moment, I'm not geared to do that. And, that's why I'll probably never be a good trader. So, in here I'll attempt to explain what *I* think is driving the market activity of the last few days.
Bear Stearns -- obviously the Bear Stearns collapse was a huge event, for a lot of reasons. The most important was that it scared the bejeebus out of a bunch of people in the FED, the Treasury, the Admin, on Wall Street, Fannie, Freddie, and OFHEO.
Basically EVERYONE went to battle stations and immediately started damage control.
The FED slashed rates .75 points.
The FED cut the discount window rate by .25
The FED now allows non-banks, organizations that it does not directly monitor or control or oversee in any way to give it collateral of dubious value (home loans basically) and in return give out CHEAP loans of treasury paper which can be sold on the open market by these non-banks (think JP Morgain, Goldman Sachs, Lehman, etc.)
Why this is important is that while banks are subject to capital restrictions that cap their use of leverage around 7-1, the investment banks are not....They and their hedge fund clients often use 2 to 4 times as much leverage.
OFHEO relaxed restrictions that Fannie and Freddie were under (for failure to accurately report financials! in the past) and are letting these institutions "gear up" their leverage even further into the face of a declining Real Estate market.
Wall Street investment banks, in a bit of a panic i believe, have begun calling in the leverage being used by their hedge fund clients.
Many of these hedge funds had gone "short" the financials, and long on commodities (fuBarrio's trade for the last couple of years) and this has become a very crowded trade. As the hedge funds are all racing for the door simultaneously it's creating a massive short squeeze in the financials and a quick butchering in the commodity complex.
Meanwhile back in the Bond pits.....
US short term treasuries are now yielding .5% per annum on a 3 month. That's the lowest on record. And, according to Karl Denniger http://market-ticker.denninger.net you could actually execute a "reverse carry trade" on the Japanese the yield is so low.
Denninger explains it as black and white:
1.) either the bond guys (who move many billions of dollars btw) don't know that they are doing, or
2.) we are entering a massive deflationary collapse on the scale of the Great Depression.
I've just started reading Denninger in the last month or so, but he is the best I've found online in trying to explain the gordian knot we've created for ourselves with this debt mess. He does a posting pretty much every trading day.
Good luck, everyone. At this point, I've paired back my exposure to the precious metals to just my "core holding" which is more of an "inflation hedge" than a spec that we are taking off while I'm still looking to go short on runups.....again a very crowded trade, and likely not that profitable until people start relaxin a little more.
If gold can somehow carve out a nice round bottom in the 800's.....retest the 1000....and pullback momentarily, we will be looking at a classic cup and handle after a big up move and i would be recommending to go in very long, perhaps in a leveraged way to catch a big upmove. Now, is not that time yet.
If you are not a trader, and have actually read this far, and wondering what you should do to protect yourself in case things continue to get "nasty" out there....get out of debt, stock up on food and cash, stay in touch with friends and family, (move to south america :) ), and get a gold coin or two and a little silver "just in case".
ciao,
fuBarrio
Wednesday, March 19, 2008
Gold Price -- Lunchtime Musings
In my last post, I pointed out that I had a "sense" that things were getting ready to "turn"....meaning the trends:
commodities higher
dollar lower
US financials lower
US stock market lower (in general)
...were all getting ready to reverse for a "pause that refreshes".
In light of the recent activity, I think we've seen that turn. Nearly all of the commodities have turned lower, the dollar bounced (slightly), US financials had a "snap back" rebound after the bear stearns news broke, and the US stock market had a powerful up day.
While I think that all of these "counter-trend" moves could carry on, I'm not willing to gamble on them anymore.
I'm moving to a "neutral" stance and I'm waiting like a panther to pounce on some of these things again. The only thing that bothers me is the speed with which this "snapback" took place. I was hoping for a couple of week move to cover the same ground.
I found a post backing my "sense" (at least in gold) that said that gold was ripe for a fall back to the bottom of an upchannel move down to spot 940 range. That was the number I was looking for, but given the speed with which we've fallen to that number, I'm not going to go "all in" yet....the counter trend rally *could* erase up to half of the previous gains from the recent move (and if something fundamentally shifts even more).
If we are lucky enough to have this retracement drag out a little bit longer to shake off some of the speculative "froth" in the gold market, it could set up for a very nice move upwards again.....for that we'd need to see the volatility calm down and the price of gold to move back into the back pages of the financial news rags.
ciao,
fuBarrio
p.s. the BIGGEST news (buried in the Bear Stearn debacle) was the fact that the OFHEO opened up fannie and freddie's ability to use their capital to loan out more money. in other words, from my understanding they *relaxed* their capital restrictions....again, in other words, from my understanding, they are letting them lever UP into a DECLINING market.
for the love of God this can only be a way for the investment banks hedge funds and other deer caught in the headlights to pawn off their crap onto an organization that is ostensibly under an implicit guarantee for taxapayers to backt them.
oh....p.p.s. fed funds rate is now 2.25 and i'm starting to go short the US financials again, regardless of what the technicians say. This bear market rally could last a couple of months but I believe another bank or banking institution will fail (probably more). At some point the federal reserve and the american people will run out of patience and balance sheet to keep propping them up....then....it's ......GD part II.
Sunday, March 16, 2008
Paloma, Uruguay
Saturday, March 15, 2008
You're FIRED - Finance Insurance Real Estate
Well, remember when I said that there was a good chance that fubarrio would cease to exist and fubarrio.com would descend into an oozing cesspool of commercialism?
Well, even from blatant commercialism there is something to be learned.
What's that you say?
Well, apparently, some member of the finance (loans) and insurance industries have figured out that paying for links on subject matter blogs like this one can enhance their search engine placements in what would otherwise be insanely expensive spaces to compete.
I got an email from a gal out of the UK that apparently shakes an stirs the blog universe a couple of times looking for blogs that actually have enough sway where they can actually (slowly) effect the rankings for the sites on google (among other search engines).
The other thing they've figured out is that balding dogs with bad breath and crooked teeth can be had for pennies on the pound sterling.
She pays a couple of "quid' a month for a link and probably charges the company she's placing it for considerably more -- (hooray intermediaries)
Well, as it turns out -- another free internet marketing tip from your uncle fubarrio -- if you place a link with anchor text in a DEEP link (meaning deep within some content that seems to fit what it is the link is going to) it tends to perform much better.
While they didn't really ask for my to create a blog post about loans or insurance, I decided to anyways as a freebie sendoff for my commercial friends....wow...people actually make money with this internet thing? I'll have to look into that.
Anyhow, you know my personal opinion on debt by now. It's a giant ponzi scheme that is bound to be the end of us all.
Insurance i haven't talked a lot about.
I remember when I was a younger pup at the UW I was studying finance. I had delusional dreams of becoming an investment banker after spending some time as an analyst for Fidelity. Little did I know that the titans of wall street were more likely to hire a shoe shine boy outside the floor of one of the exchanges than to hire out of an unheard of pac-10 university.
I remember i went in to talk to the college career counselor (this university has something like 35k students). She said in the entire time she'd been there (10 years) she only knew of one person who had graduated from UW and went to work on wall street (!)
In the late nineties I knew of at least one other, but it was as struggle for him....he was making 35,000/year in Manhatten! He was working crazy hours as an anlyst for some "fourth tier" investment bank :) He gradually worked his way up to one of the more respected banks before bailing to get his MBA and a more relaxing lifestyle in Intel's Treasury Department.
Ok, well, if this deep link doesn't give someone's website a boost....I don't know what will....
Be informed about your life insurance Hey, I mean, that sounds like good advice right? I always likened the life insurance folks to casino types though...it's like...hey, if this is such a great deal, how did you pay for such a huge building?
Loans to get your finances in shape. This link I have to say is almost oxymoronic....
If you want to get your finances in shape...stop taking out loans! Maybe they are gonna tell you that they can consolidate your credit cards, etc etc etc. I dunno. Call me a ludite, or a neo fundamentalist or something, but giving loans to americans is kinda like giving whisky to the indians....or keyboards to the English.
ciao,
fuBarrio
Thursday, March 13, 2008
Nuclear "Indian Summer"
It's a bit ironic, because I actually have quite a bit to say. It's just a matter of trying to organize it all into some sort of coherent thought process that someone could reasonably follow. Now, THAT is going to a take a little doing....but here it goes:
Get Your Affairs in Order Redux
In my orginal post "Get Your Affairs in Order" I posited that the US dollar was enjoying what would be a short counter trend rally -- perhaps lasting for one or two months, and after that rally the bottom would fall out.
For those that live on the dollar and are already cutting it pretty close to the bone in regards to "disposable income" (see: fubarrio!) my advice was to hedge away some of this risk. I think suggested that gold would be one of the most efficient ways of accomplishing this.
Since that orginal post, as predicted, all hell broke loose to the downside on the dollar, and things we use to "heat and eat" (commodities priced globally that we must compete for globally with depreciated dollars) have obviously soared.
So why do I bring this up now? Just to gloat? (yes, a little gloating is in order, but that's not why!)
What prompted me to post the orginal "get your affairs in order" and to speculate that some time remained for people to do just that was that there was a good deal of *manipulation* in the marketplace as the dollar approached significant psychological "points of no return"
If you remember, "support and resistence" -- theoretical "lines in the sand" are psychologically important price points for a given asset or security. While these fundamentally have no reason to exist (usually), the market is made up of people who have psychological motivations for the way they price things.
Important support prices (prices through which a given security seems "unwilling" to go under) or resistance (prices a given security has a hard time "breaking through") can be for any number of reasons. The most common are: round numbers, and places where significant bottoms or tops in price action were formed previously.
Right now, we've bounced off some important psychological levels, with a little help of overt market manipulation by the powers that be. They have in effect halted the "nuclear autumn" and put the warm sunshine of capital appreciation back on your face for an extended "nuclear indian summer".
Well, as soon as the warm snap is over, guess what....getting ready for "nuclear winter".
Gold at $1,000/oz
Gold "printed" 1,000/oz in the spot market today for the first time ever. This is a signficantly psychological price barrier and it is pretty unlikely that a security like gold could just power through without going back to "retest" the 1000/oz mark to see if it could act as "support".
Gold has since pulled back, but without doing any detailed analysis, this is NOT where you typically see a multi-year high. Gold should hit the 4 digit mark a few more times with small pull backs before approaching the 1000 absent any news. Then "magically" some news supportive of gold will probably appear to "explain" a breakthrough past the 1,000 mark in a significant
way.
Dollar/Yen at 100
The Yen has *soared* in recent months. And, as many pundits expected his 100/dollar this a.m. It has since backed off fractionally. But with US inflation hitting asian shores look for them to continue to let their currencies appreciate (longer term) to fight off food inflation. While Japan is not China, Chinese appreciation gives Japan more breathing room (i believe) to let their currency inflate against the USD
Oil at 110/barrel
Does that number just sound "high" to anyone else? Good God. :)
Nat gas over $10/MBTU
I guess the unseasonably warm winter didn't materialize this year in the North and we see what happened to nat gas.
S&P at 1305, 1290, 1270, DJIA under 12k
OK. This is why I think that we could see some shorter term "counter trend" moves in all the aforementioned.
To any casual observer, the "great news" out of the treasury, or out of congress, the white house, or the FED (pick your day, and pick your 'suprise' announcement) just seems like (somewhat) normal newsflow.
To anyone who has been tradin for more than a week, the timing of the newsflow is VERY suspicious (to be kind). The FED, the treasury, and probably the president's working group on capital markets (AKA the "plunge protection team") have been waging a massive war of PR....
Now, if you are LONG in the dollar, or the US markets you may not notice. If you are NOT it seems very contrived.
It seems that no longer is the FED's mandate to "promote full employment" and "promote price stability" -- unless said "price stability" extends to exotic mortgage derivatives to the expense of bread for the people!
The FED has REPEATEDLY announced massive "bailout", special loans, dramatic rate cuts, liquidity injections, etc. totaling in the many 100's of billions of dollars.....All executed (even when done BETWEEN meetings --- a very rare time to announce rate moves) *right* when the markets seemed poised to cascade down off of major price support.
The FED's move seems to have been aimed at "shock and awe" (not sure if they are using this term but the media is) of the short sellers and other would be "bears".
Now, if you're long the US stock market or getting ready to retire in a couple of years you might think this is a good thing. But, sadly this is most certainly NOT a good thing. Because these injections of liquidity have to come at the expense of something ... and it's coming at the expense of the dollar....the result is rising prices for us as a way to socialize and subsidize the largess of the irresponsible lending institutions and their multi-million (and in some cases billion)dollar/year CEOs.
All the while, helping to "support" prices for the collateral underlying this mess (the houses and real estate itself) does NOTHING to address affordability for you and me who have to actually buy these mcstucco sh&t boxes at some point.
Government intervention in markets -- where markets are allowed to go up --- but not allowed to come down, can only end in a disaster. Unfortunately those gaining the most from their manipulations will NOT be those that suffer from the coming collapse.
SO....in summary.....the manipulations are giving you a chance.....we may see some stability in the dollar and maybe even a little "dead cat" bounce in the markets. Use that as an opportunity to move your 401k money into something that doesn't rely on financial stocks.
If/when govt intervention fails we will see a massive and spectacular bank failure (or two or more) and by all rights the GSE fannie mae is probably insolvent right now....it's just not admitting it yet.
ciao,
fuBarrio
p.s. as always, none of this constitutes investment advice. If you're crazy enough to accept investment advice from a blind, hairless dog on the internet with no dental plan, then expect to look like fubarrio in a couple of years.
Thursday, February 28, 2008
Another Inverted Cup and Handle

Monday, February 18, 2008
Free Internet Marketing Advice
While I'm never shy about handing out unsolicited advice -- a fun little habit that has scuttled many a job interview prematurely -- I haven't been as active about it here on fubarrio in recent months.
The reason, alas, is that it seems that the original "raison d'etre" of fubarrio, while a bit meandering, had been relegated primarily to:
- what's it like living in Uruguay as an expat, and
- trading your way into the poor house with faulty pattern recognition brought on by senility and greyed out eyes desperately in need of cataract surgery.
Lately, I've been watching the markets and the happenings in the states a LOT less, and the bear case in alot of markets has been taken mainstream by reality slapping the bulls in the face.
The reason I'm not following things so close is that
a.) the turn is in hand and the trend is in place....watching the trend unfold (especially in resi real estate) is goin to be like watching a slow motion train wreck....one that will take about 10 years to "play out" IMO. In fact the ramifications will be felt until the last participant in the insanity dies....maybe even afterwards if they can shake any sense into their grandkids before they leave this rock.
b.) i've been really busy with my pet project here in Uruguay -- turning this sleepy cow country into a booming offshore financial centre.
(Ok, well, admittedly, this place isn't really ready for that....in spite of having some outrageously beneficial laws relating to bank secrecy, they also have this little problem of red tape making it an outrageously expensive and SLOW place to do business.)
In spite of that, I march on like a committed soldier to certain stress induced illness and perhaps death in trying to rework the internet marketing at my little company.
Now, I've learned a lot in the last year -- mostly about what a fool I was in regards to Internet marketing. And, if I could go back in time with 20/20 hindsight I'd probably do things a little bit differently. However, in spite of all this, it turns out that I have a lot better grasp on this whole Internet marketing thing than a lot of the people who really need this knowledge. So, I'm constantly being asked questions from friends and associates for how to "improve" what it is they are doing.
This primarily comes from companies in "startup mode" before they've realized that they already known everything :)
Ironically, these guys don't have the time money or inclination to go out and get someone who can truly help them, regardless of how desperately they need it.
So, what I'm beginning is yet ANOTHER blog, to jot down some of my findings, foibles, unsolicited advice, and war stories from the world of internet marketing.
A quick search of the term "internet marketing" will turn up a "brazillion" hits because there is big money (apparently) in selling flailing entrepreneurs internet marketing secrets, tricks, schemes, etc.
I'm not selling anything. This is purely, free internet marketing advice. Worth every penny you paid for it. :) However, I will attempt to make a solid effort to be honest and open and forthcomin with some of what I've found, what I still struggle with, and what I've burned the last year of my life dealing with so that you won't have to (hopefully).
As an aside, this sort of thing may be generically interesting to the less well-off (or younger!) fuBarrio readers who dream of expatriating themselves, but are "stuck" in financial situations where there income is not very portable.
As a Controller/CFO/CTO of startups in silly-cone valley, I had created a decidedly NON MOBILE work profile.
Trading, and later this whole internet marketing thing, were just my response to get out from under the tyranny of the hour-long commute while paying out massive amounts of my "hard earned" income in (housing) debt service, and crazy Cali-taxes to what I felt was a fascist regime.
If my "other" project can help someone get the confidence to take the plunge, or save someone from one of my fubars....all the better.
I will still attempt to articulate some thoughts on uruguay, trading, and the financial world at large through fubarrio, but I'm starting the other project as a place to point people who want to know about the place I spend the other 20 hours a day :)
ciao,
fuBarrio
p.s. as an aside about my other blog. two obvious things i'm doing wrong:
1.) never link to your new blog until you have it setup on a unique URL. i own the URL (without the blogspot stuff) but i'm too lazy to set it up right now, and
2.) think thrice before you name a site (or a product or a company) some cutesy "pun". people will constantly be mispelling your name. 'tis much better to come up with something unique never before coined and "own" that name.....what can I say, I'm a sucker for a pun.
Tuesday, February 12, 2008
Bad Year to Stop Sniffing Glue....
I made a drunken proclamation earlier last year that Hilary *would* be the Democratic nominee. As if that wasn't stupid enough, I staked my "life" to it, saying that I would give up blogging under the fuBarrio psuedonym if it didn't come to pass.
Ironically, I also predicted that John McCain would be the Rep Nominee to a different friend.
How the worm has turned. McCain came out of nowhere to take control and Hilary is reeling.
Now, in my defense I wasn't following the race as an expat and had never heard Obama speak. I was betting my bet on the Clintons being coniving and a little bit crazy perhaps.
After Hilary *won* New Hampshire (her first comeback so far) I heard Barack speak for the first time....in a concession speech.
I had a feeling that my dog liver was cooked at that point. He *sounded presidential* to me....even in defeat.
A mix of MLK and a Kennedy almost.
Now, that said, my slim hopes of keeping this website alive as anything other than an empty shell of commercialism and a dead link farm lie in the sinister minds of the Clinton camp. Surely, they can drag out some photoshopped images of Obama sharing a cigar with BinLaden in a Pakastani strip club or something (?)
I know it's just talk -- and there isn't much a politico can do but make more trouble -- but the irony is this barack guy is the best chance for the US keeping up its spirits when things suck over the next few years.
I truly do hope he wins the demo ticket, for the sake of the US.
For the sake of fubarrio, i hope those scheming clintons have kept one hail mary up their sleeve for the final push.
ciao,
fuBarrio
Sunday, February 10, 2008
Ocular Penetration Restriction Act
But, this propose legislation is so important I had to take the time to figure out that whole video embed thing from YouTube.
If I could take the time to wrap my nontechnical pea brain around that...you can take the time to check out this video....The most useful piece of legislation to come down the pipe in recent memory
Sunday, February 03, 2008
SuperBowl, Sportsbetting, Odds, and the Sportsbooks
I'd wager it's also a big day for worldwide sportsbooks, notwithstanding their prediliction for better on the "other" football (futbol).
Years ago, when I was more in tune with the happenings at the offshore sportsbooks, I noticed a strange phenomenon (or thought I did at least). That I was going to mention in light of the setup for this superbowl.
Before I get into that however, I need to give you some background (for the uninitiated) on how a sports book operates.
Sports books are in the business of matching betters with each other and acting as a "broker" of sorts. The return for his work in matching up bettors (or punters as the brits say) he is given the "juice" a commision of sorts, also known as the "vig" or "vigorish". I have no idea where they got the term vigorish. The vig typically amounts to 5% of the total wager and in theory is paid by the winner. But if you analyse the situation it's technically paid by both sides with a reduced expectation of return.
Well, this seems pretty easy for the sports bettor, right? All he has to do is pick the winner, and give 5% back to the bookie for taking the transaction.
Not so fast. The reason that so many people get into trouble with the bookies and end up getting kneecaps broken (in the movies at least) is that the bookie isn't a total knucklehead. He realizes that his optimum total return on dollars wagered over the long haul with minimum risk is maximized if he can find people for BOTH sides of the wager.
But how does he get both sides of a wager filled when there are some obvious favorites out there?
There are some "tricks" they use to accomplish this. Two typical ones are to pay a moneyline, or "lay odds" and the other is to create a "line". A specialist either evens the possibility of a win by adding points to a teams outcome -- or they attempt to even the betting by paying out larger dollars for "underdogs" -- or outcomes that are judged as less likely.
Laying odds, I'm not as familiar with, but you see it at where matches are a binary result. Examples of this are the craps table, prize fights, cock fights, etc.
You hear, "3 will get you 5", or some combination of risk vs. payout.
The bookie will attempt to tailor the odds so he matches the betting and gets the "vig" or "juice" from either outcome resulting in a payout that is less than what he took in.
Horse racing is similar, however the handicapping method of payout is a sophisticated "on the fly" calculation of payout vs. wagered. I have read somewhere that the "juice" at a racetrack can be as high as 18%. While this sounds very high, it is understood that games that are more expensive to organize and present and games that take longer to unfold have a higher payout ratio to the house.
That is on of the reasons, no pass in craps pays the house about 1%, and a game of keno or bingo can run 40%. Craps is very fast and bingo is very slow
Point Spread
The point spread is the other method the bookies use to even out their betting. The "line" or point spread is determined by a few different wizards that work in the larger sportsbooks....and most (if not all) the smaller books follow suit with that published line. These wizards are incredibly talented at finding the line before the bettin begins in a given week, and absent a big middle of the week injury (previously unknown to the bookies) these lines are relatively stable.
Moving the line by the bookie is problematic (although necessary sometimes) because he runs the risk (espcially if the line moves enough) or having a bettor place two bets at different times with different point spreads and winning them both. This happens when the outcome falls between the two point spread quotes and is called "getting middled" by the bookies.
(I call "getting middled" when you end up with seat "B" between two obnoxious fellow travelers on a cross country flight...an equally uncomfortable feeling.)
The online casinos have a application that feeds them the vegas lines when they are published and any changes to the moneyline.
You will hear this quoted something like, "The Seahawks are favored by 6 1/2 points". The quotes for lines tend to hand around the numbers represented multiples of 7 or 3 points (or some combo) which represents touchdowns and field goals of course.
The point spread however almost always involves a half point. Why is this?
Well, the only thing worse for the bookie than getting middled or being stupid and going into a big game with very lopsided betting -- the good bookies have arrangements to "lay off" big betting to bigger books just like insurance companies and re-insurance do -- is a "push.
A "push" is when the book declares a favorite by some number of points and that ends up being the difference in the game.
A "push" by rule means that all wagers are returned to the players and there is no VIG or JUICE to collect for the bookie. Basically he did a bunch of work for nothing. Not good.
For this reason you *rarely* see the spread an even number.
In a VERY rare case, the Rams and the Titans were in a superbowl (perhaps in the year 2000) and the initial line came out at Rams -7 meaning that the Rams were projected to win by one touchdown.
No matter how hard the book tried to move the line to either 6 1/2 or 7 1/2 they couldn't. It created a massive inbalance of betting on one side or the other.
It turns out that game...through a SERIES of spectacular plays, close calls, a photo finish, etc, the final outcome was Rams -7...they won by exactly one touchdown as predicted. amazing. The books made NOTHING on the superbowl game and the vegas casinos had to be happy with the slop over betting and extra traffic the superbowl brought in.
Do the bookies always get the line exactly right? Well, no...however, at times it is *amazing* how accurate the published point spread is....The point that I need to emphasize here is that THEY AREN'T TRYING TO PREDICT THE OUTCOME.
They are, technically, trying to predict what point spread will give them exactly even betting on both sides.
That is a fine, but very important distinction -- which brings me to thing i "noticed" some years ago -- although i have only anecdotal evidence to back me up.
It seemed that teams from large population centers would receive a larger porportion of betting...and teams from large population centers would receive a larger percentage of "homer" betting...meaning you bet on your favorite (home) team to win whether you really believe they will beat the spread or not....because you want to root for them presumably.
Cities with large populations that were really into gambling -- especially big cities from the northeast seemed to have enough "homers" betting to actually move the spread beyond what regular betting should be.
So, a game with the NY Giants and AZ Cardinals would (sometimes) seem to have an inordinate number of bettors taking the NY Giant, plus or minus whatever the line happened to be.
The result was that someone could simply bet against the giants with the line and come out ahead.
Of course, this was years ago, and I never took the time to do a deeper analysis -- and if there was an anomoly, i'm sure it was gobbled up by the big swingers who try to make a living off of sports betting.....The lines are so accurate, and the vig is high enough that there is only a small small small number of people in the world who can make a living sports betting...although many try.
So, how does that effect the superbowl line?
I would guess that the NE Patriots, bein that they are unbeaten and receiving an incredible amount of press -- their QB was on 60 minutes -- the number of bandwagon jumpers have more than likely swamped the numbers of even the "homers" from NY.
This is an unusual game from that persepctive. It's not like a regular season NY Giants, AZ Cardinals game.
So Superbowl predictions, I have none -- though underdog + points can sometimes be more fun to watch for me. I'm a sucker for an underdog.
After Superbowl predictions, I have one -- bet against the return of a "spring bounce" in US residential Real Estate usually marked as beginning the day after the SuperBowl.
Not withstanding the efforts of the Treasury, the Whitehouse and the Fed, I'm taking Recession (minus the points).
ciao for now,
fuBarrio
Friday, February 01, 2008
Yahoo! - It's all Good!
While I didn't "believe it", I was quick to lighten up on my shorts on the gap down and my short positions now are a way to cover my longs in case the SHTF. (These technicians think that we are in for a "paws" that refreshes on the bear market....then later in the year, another leg down.)
Anyhow, after seeing google disapoint I was starting to think that we could catch another wave down....then this:
MSFT agrees to buy Yahoo at a ****61% premium**** over their trading price.
Who in the H.E double toothpicks pays a 61% premium for a declining asset.
Finally, somebody overpays, stupidly, for an asset and i'm not an owner of the acquirer. Bout time I missed a bullet.
I'm quickly left to wonder what this means for the rapidly shrinking business of delivering search results.
Currently the three players are Google, Yahoo, and MSN. If #2,3 merge, then it's really a two horse race and a bunch of also rans. I'm curious whether the algoritms will merge...whether there will be a difference in the two sites' search results as their is now.
Time will tell....It'll be interesting to see what this does to the indices today given what a big weighting msft has.
ciao,
fB
Tuesday, January 22, 2008
Fed Slashes Rate by 75 Basis Points
The Federal Reserve, confronted with a global stock sell-off fanned by increased fears of a recession, cut a key interest rate by three-quarters of a percentage point on Tuesday. The Fed said it was cutting the federal funds rate, the interest that banks charge each other on overnight loans, to 3.5 percent, down by three-fourths of a percentage point from 4.25 percent
Wow....to see how suprised I was see my last post.
I was working this morning, but luckily my work day in uruguay starts three hours before the market opens.
During a break in the action I took a lunch break and traded (small) on my convictions and made (a little) coin.
I went long on SSO (canadian silver mining stock) at 30 and change and after it went up a couple of points dumped it. of course, it has continued to go up since i dumped it but i didn't have time to watch it today (and didn't even know at the time that BB had dropped the rate - or announced a press conference - or however he telegraphed this).
I dropped my sds (s&p double short) which bets the s&p will fall at the gap down on the open.
BUT, like i said in my previous posting i'm looking for a chance to reenter that trade - asap. This is just one of those markets I don't like being "not short" :)
Ok...lunch break is almost over and it's time to get back to my day job. The traders have to be loving this volatility....especially when it's so friggin' predictable!
ciao,
fuBarrio
I love the smell of a bailout in the morning....
for anyone who wasn't watching the markets this last week and especially over the 3 day holiday in the US....
aoooga a ooooo ga....DIVE! DIVE!
utter pandamonium it seems.
the reality is that given the magnitude of the runup, to be down 20% in hong kong, shanghai, or mubai is really not that big of a deal.
however, the magnitude of the decline in the EU got my attention.
and, with the "bailout" proposal being bantied about by bernanke/bush/paulson/congress/2008 candidates getting very little play from the markets i suspect that the heavy guns will come out on tuesday a.m. in the US markets.
what does that mean?
one of two things:
1.) "plunge protection team" interference in the futures market and maybe the market for securities themselves. if you don't know what the plunge protection team is google it or the working group on markets.....you don't need a tinfoil hat anymore to suspect that the markets are manipulated by government forces. everyone pretty much admits it these days.
2,) the market will be allowed to 'gap down' and run for an hour or two and then bernanke will announce a "suprise" early cut to the interest rates, the market will spike up and create a massive short squeeze rally.
...sigh....the kind of volatility that's promised tomorrow almost makes me want to buckle up and jump in for a frenetic day of trading.
however tempting the promise of making and/or losing my annual salary on a days worth of bets is not enough to get me back in the saddle tomorrow. i have a "day job" that demands my attention -- so i'll have to stay content to sit in my longer term holds and let the currents push me where they may.
ciao,
fuBarrio
Sunday, January 06, 2008
Hillary (O)bomb(a)s in Iowa
My fat mouth *may* have finally caught up with me. Obama cleaned Hillary's clock in Iowa -- jeez even that populist farce Edwards beat her out.
Well, rather that get all hopeful that Americans have wised up to the ways of the Clintons, or put much stock in a few thousand farmers, I'm going to wait until a few more states have finished their primaries.
If you'll remember, fuBarrio made 'drunken proclamation' (too lazy to find the post) where I bet me "life" Hillary would find a way to subvert the Democratic process and get herself nominated.....In a more sober moment later, I decided that I would stop bloggin under the fuBarrio nameplate forever if Edwards or Obama were able to nudge her out.
...who knows....it's definately looking more likely this week than last. But I don't want to get too excited yet....
Now, what'll really be interesting to watch in NH (other than the dems) will be Ron Paul's support and whether or not the mainstream media acknowledges it or not.
ciao,
fuBarrio
Monday, December 31, 2007
2007 - A Fubar'ed Financial Year in Review
I'm going to attempt to review some of those calls here and critique what we got right and what we screwed up royally.
1.) US residential housing would fall HARD
check
2.) Bank failures would be more prevalent
check -- however, forces are fighting hard to liquidate markets to keep insolvent lenders alive
3.) The reliquification would create a drop in the value of the US dollar
check
4.) Commodities would benefit from the dollar crunch, Gold out of credit tightness and fear
check
5,) Uranium prices would dip in summer and then reignite in fall
check
6,) Uranium juniors would be a good bet in fall through spring 2008
NOT...in fact junior miners across the board have been hit hard with some (very few) notable exceptions.
7.) financials were ripe for a fall from grace
check. in fact, we've already seen quite a few BIG names taking on serious water. expect more of this as the depth of the fraud and excesses becomes better known in 2008.
8.) The broader market was ripe for a fall at Dow 13,000
NOT. I reiterated my call again at 14,000 and it seems to be under significant pressure, but so far Sovereign wealth fund investments in financials (classic knife catchers, imo) and a falling dollar has meant that dollar holders are looking for something to buy. This has kept the market bouncing between 13 and 14k.
The broader market has gone basically nowhere since summer.
What my "call" for 2008?
Not nearly as exciting or risky as my calls for 2007. more of the same.
As 2007 turned out I had very little time for trading and just stuck (mostly) with my macro trends (dollar down, stuff up). Trend following is the most predictably profitable trade, and calling the turn (down) in the broader markets is where i lost the most money in 2007.
Calling a "turn" in a market is not for the faint of heart or weak of pocketbook. If I'd had more time for trading I would have had more time for research and been leaning pretty heavily (short) on subprime lenders. But, I didn't, and probably won't in 2008 either. So, it will be an exercise in trying "not to lose" rather than winning.
"Trying not to lose" is a little like the NFL's "prevent defense" when I try it. Not very successful. It is something where I have a VERY spotty record, so it will be interesting to see if I'm able to figure things out without getting washed out.
Good luck to all, and a prosperous new year.
ciao,
fuBarrio
Monday, December 17, 2007
Blogs About Uruguay
Here is a semi-complete list of Blogs about Uruguay from other points of view:
A Cup of Mate a Day...: http://acupofmate.blogspot.com/
A Girl And Guy In Uruguay: http://adamleandra.blogspot.com/
A Maverick's Odyssey: http://www.amavericko.com/
A Year In Uruguay: http://www.chuckstull.blogspot.com/
Alyssa In Uruguay: http://alyssainuruguay.blogspot.com/
Amargo y Dulce: http://bittersweetinuruguay.blogspot.com/
Arrancopelito: http://arrancopelito.blogspot.com/
Beneath the Southern Cross...A Family's Adventures in Uruguay: http://uruguayadventures.blogspot.com/
Christopher's Tales: http://christopherstales.blogspot.com/
Coastal Uruguay: http://coastaluruguay.com/
Dustin Goes To Uruguay: http://dustinsaldarriaga.blogspot.com/
El Diablo Tranquilo Comes Together: http://www.eldiablotranquilo.com/blog/
Elli's Story: http://ellijelli.blogspot.com/
From Uruguay: http://www.from-uruguay.com/
Las Alas del Alba: http://thewingsofthedawn.blogspot.com/
Latitude -30º -35ºS MVD - UY: http://accrux.blogspot.com/
Laurin In Uruguay: http://laurinariail.com/
Learning Uruguay: http://urufish.wordpress.com/
Lessons @ UY: http://a-philosophical.blogspot.com/
Living In Montevideo: http://livinginmontevideo.blogspot.com/
Odeliza: http://www.odeliza.com/
Pde-uy.com/wordpress/: http://kzlv.com/wordpress/
Place No Limits: http://placenolimits.blogspot.com/
The Beautiful Changes: http://www.fionamarie-site.blogspot.com/
The Latin Americanist: http://ourlatinamerica.blogspot.com/
The Seven C's: http://cleanorganizedandontime.blogspot.com/
This Is Uruguay: http://guay.wordpress.com/
Uruguay Adventure: http://adventureathand.blogspot.com/
Uruguay Blog: http://blog.totaluruguay.com/
Uruguay Dreaming: http://uruguaydreaming.com/
Uruguay Guy: http://uruguayguy.blogspot.com/
Uruguay Living: http://www.uruguayliving.com/
Uruguay News Blog: http://news.totaluruguay.com/
Uruguay News and Views: http://uruguaynews.blogspot.com/
Uruguay's Wildlife & Natural Sanctuaries: http://uruguay1.blogspot.com/
Viviendo en Uruguay: http://tafw.blogspot.com/
Waiting on the Master: http://worldstoosmall.blogspot.com/
Zest for Life: http://jules-zestforlife.blogspot.com/
and, just added, Teckno Yanqui http://tekno-yanqui.blogspot.com
List compiled by Thorn and folks at sociedadsouthron, uruguay forums
Enjoy,
fuBarrio
Ron Paul - $6 Million Dollar Man
It looks like his Boston Tea Party money bomb is probably going to raise around 6MM today. Of course, things are still too good in the US for someone like Paul to win....It's interesting to see a stat that something like 61% of repubnicans polled said they would *never* vote for Paul.
Good thing they have locked down the primaries to only those that have registered for a given party. Otherwise we might actually change the disasterous course the US is on....
Just another reason why 61% of fuBarrios will *never* vote for a repugnican...or demorat...Be interesting to see how much cash Paul burns through trying to reach unreachable idiots in those early states.....what a collosal boondoggle for the media outlets in iowa and NH ....
ciao,
fuBarrio
Sunday, December 16, 2007
Dazed and Confused
Granted, I don't talk to many kids here....and I certainly wouldn't count anyone under 20 as a close acquaintance, but from a distance, the kids in Montevideo always remind me a little of my cousins who went to high school in the late 70's and early 80's in california.
ciao,
fuBarrio
Parque Rodo Beach
Tuesday, December 11, 2007
You + US = FUBAR!
UBS just announced *another* $10B in writedowns??? Blamed bad "subprime" mortgages of course.
holy crap.
anyone remember the good ole days when a "rogue trader" nick leeson lost a "mere" $1.4B and bankrupted Barings, a 233 year old bank?
what's it gonna take before the first of these goliaths get involved in a "take under"?
another couple $10B here and there and that's gonna start to add up to real money :)
...at least until the fed makes it all go away with another rate cut. (that was sacrcasm by the way)
ciao,
fuBarrio
Friday, December 07, 2007
A "Date" that will Live in Infamy
(uh...oh yeah....and some dudes dropped some bombs on hawaii too)
At the fuBarrio household as you might imagine however, the year 2003 is much more important than 1941.
Dec the 7th each year starts a "murderer's row" of special dates to be remembered and commemorated for fuBarrio culminating either with Golden Lotus's birthday in January or Valentine's day scarcely more than 30 days later.
While maturity and poverty have meant that fuBarrio can step down the financial extravegance of the gifts.....the maturity of the relationship means that he has to put special thought into doing something "special" for each -- anniversary, xmas, new years eve, bday, vday
:)
LUCKILY, now that we live in south america....nice weather outdoors this time of year opens up a new wealth of possibilities. not available when we lived in the north
....(i won't give you all the details of our surf outing on her birthday during a january storm in california....let's just say i'm still coughing up salt water)
Any ideas that can help a bald spotted rabid dog with his quandry can be placed in the comments section or emailed to me.....(and, yes, massive facial reconstructive surgery was contemplated but voted down due to cost and the recovery time would mean i'd miss the westminster kennels prequalifiers)
ciao,
fuBarrio