
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
Saturday, November 24, 2007
Punta Carretas
fubarrio
Saturday, November 17, 2007
Yellow Lab Puppy
ciao,
Sunday, November 11, 2007
Our Accomodations in Brasil - Lexus Ingleses
Here is where we stayed.....I didn't really know anything about if before we got there. It was setup by a travel agent. I guess they aren't too strict on trademark infringement in Brasil yet.
The room included breakfast and dinner. 5 days, four nights, flights from mvd and 50 minute trip to hotel from a/p and back ran about $1000 including taxes and airport charges (ugh)....of course the visas were another $340 -- remember get your brasilian visas up north. they gouge here in montevideo.
The restaurant was ok....the outdoor pool a little lame....the indoor pool looked cloudy/filthy. the location on the beach was awesome, water still a little chilly this far south this time of year....weather was amazing most days....the rooms were "adequate", but not high-end. They seemed like they were outfitted to make it easier to clean the sand out that that guests invariably track in. Each room was actually a suite, and also had a little fridge, plates dishes, cups, silverware, pots/pans and a "hotplate" of sorts for cooking in the rooms.
While the hotel overall wasn't bad, the name "Lexus Ingleses" made me laugh, and I told Golden Lotus that it was more like the "Hyundai Ingleses" :)
That said, of course, it was markedly better looking that this thing down the beach from us.....get a load of the name on the matching boat out front.....fitting since this paintjob is a total nightmare.
Fishermen In Brasil
Thursday, November 08, 2007
Florianopolis, Brasil
the country is huge, and we didn't see much of even the town we visited, but i'll give you some general impressions here and follow it up with some pictures in a later post:
It's a cool place.
They have a lot more diversity there than uruguay -- even in the whitewashed south east corner that we visited. some (especially uruguayos) may disparage it, but it was a welcome change for me.
it's a lot more of a car culture. i think the taxes are lower on cars. the roads are big. lots of malls with big parkings lots. looked a lot more like the US than either argentina or uruguay -- closer to chile. btw, i noticed that gasoline was 2.50 reales, and ethanol was 1.50 reales per litre (sugar based)
the dollar's shellacking has hurt "affordability" for expats. it's still cheap-ish but the real has gone from about 3 to the dollar to 1.75 (ouch) -- i guess that's what energy independence and subsequently not being forced to secure supplies in the desert will get you. amazing, since these guys are notorious for destroying currencies.
weather in SE part was awesome. this would be the "colder" part of the country
although i'm sure there is crime there, it is NOTHING like advertised from what i saw (again in SE part only). saw no crime, or signs of it. saw people walking around with valuable watches/jewlery in not that great of neighborhoods. i was very concerned about security after talkin to people about rio and sao paulo, but again, it's a big country with lots of texture i guess.
portuguese, while relatively understandable for spanish readers (while in written form) is pretty hard to follow with only 5 days of exposure! :) i got by with a little bit of hacky portuguese (VERY little) and spanish most of the time. lots of people will understand your spanish and then talk back to you in portuguese :) good luck. i've been told speaking spanish loudly with a gringo accent is bad form in sketchier areas as it can make you an easy target of tourist crime.
the people --
almost *anyone* could look like a potential brazilian -- we even saw asians.
now, all my single guy friends will want to know about the women. i've *heard* that the NORTH is where all the beautiful women are. again, we were in the south.
golden lotus and i talked about this and concluded that people in the south (for the most part) looked very average -- with women wearning tighter clothes and heels (not very typical in Uruguay).
however, the "looks" didn't follow a normal bell curve distribution. there were a bunch of average people but a disproportionately larger number of women that were very well "taken care of" -- outliers if you will....only there were too many to account for them all as outliers.
i assume that the guys followed the same pattern but golden lotus was kind and said that she only had eyes for her balding spotted dog! :)
I'll follow up with some pics once i download them from the camera.
ciao,
fuBarrio
Tuesday, October 30, 2007
GIX.V

the Return of Bread and Circuses...part II
fuBarrio's snaggle-toothed snarling grin is already salivating in apparent pavlovian response to something that happened last week.
in perhaps one of the coolest things ever one of my three dedicated readers did something that single-handedly cemented the likeli-hood of a higher frequency of deranged fuBarrio sightings than has been seen over the last 6 months.
you see, while Uruguay is the land of milk 'n honey, one of the things it unfortunately (for fuBarrio) is NOT, is the land of HOSTESS!!!
why is this relevant?
well, in case you are new around here, fuBarrio often appears after over consumption of corn syrup and sugar laden "north american style" junk food, in all of its empty calorie grandeur! The fuel that keeps fuBarrio going most assuredly is the oft-cited, Hostess Twinkie Snack Cakes.
...the golden fluffy sponge cake, centering the "creamy" whipped-oil-sugar "goodness" on the inside. two great tastes that taste great together!!! especially when consumed in inappropriately large amounts for someone with my blood-sugar temperament.
After numerous unsuccessful calls to the people at Hostess, and a miserably failed letter writing and petition campaign, the people at Hostess informed me that Twinkie's would NOT be coming to store shelves in Uruguay anytime soon. After many inquiries, they muttered something about the infrastructure of international "baked goods" being weak.....
...devestation, disappointment, malaise...who knew that a twinkie could actually go "bad"?....for that matter, who knew that a twinkie could be classified as "baked good"???
So, while my Circuses (north american cable tv) had been suitably replaced with a slingbox strategically placed withing WA Huskies broadcast territory (thanks mom and dad!) and high speed connectivity, *Bread* (aka Twinkies Hostess Snack Cakes) were still missing.
It's like pepper without salt, peaches without cream, simon without garfunkel....while "OK" by itself, the yin of "Circuses" only become sublime when paired with its yang of "Bread". Almost no sooner than this (ok, semi-original) thought flashed through my mind, I got a phone call from the UruguayLiving.com office. The second (of my three) readers had brought me a gift from the states.....a in home twinkie maker to satisfy my every (over) indulgence in the snack cake of the gods.
Golden Lotus has graciously offered to help with the "whipped sugar oil" filling since apparently it is best attempted by someone with opposible thumbs.
To the two of you who have enjoyed a kindler, gentler, blog these last few months I have some disappointing news; you can probably expect a lot more junk-food fueled, maniacal fuBarrio sightings here in the near future.
"chow" :),
fuBarrio
Wednesday, October 24, 2007
Damages are Contained -- to Earth
For those that haven't seen it, it's about a big class action lawsuit carried out on a shady businessman (think Enron) who got out of his stock with inside information before the SEC announced an investigation into shady accounting. This, of course, is being carried out by an even shadier lawyer.
It was funny, because I know they filmed this in the spirit of Enron (and probably worldcom, tyco, etc etc), but they things they were saying sounded earily familiar.
He was being investigated for "hiding debts in offshore entities made to hold bad debts off the balance sheet" and "booking income in the present period based on expected income." (cash flows that were future hopes rather than present realities).
I know alot of you are thinking "Yeah, Enron", but look at our current lending environment.
You've got banks creating SIVs...(not sieve) to hold bad assets off their current balance sheets -- otherwise they'd have to pony up more in the way of reserves for the banking regulators.
AND you've got option ARM writers booking the increase in mortgage principal that payers are adding to their loans by paying the minimum as REVENUE. In other words, in some bizarre twist of logic and GAAP reason, they are booking money with the lowest probability of ever bein repaid as revenue in the current period.
DOH!
I mean, I know we are a stoopid people...after all, if you couldn't see shades of Vietnam -- especially in the rhetoric before it all started -- you were blinder than the cataract encrusted pooch that resides here.
but, C'MON for crap sakes....Enron only blew up like 6 years ago and the trial of the principals JUST FINISHED.....ridiculous.
In other news, I was going to run a really tasteless headline like, "Suprise, So Cal RE is ON FIRE"...or "RED HOT"...or pick your other tasteless joke. Just heard my cousin and his family barely got out of their house with their lives....in fact he was hospitalized.....
They'll be able to return to the house in a day or two to see if anything made it, but as of now, from what I hear, they have their pajamas and each other (and that's it).
Good luck to them, and the prayers of Golden Lotus and I are with them and all the other leftcoasters caught in the blaze.
ciao,
fuBarrio
Monday, October 22, 2007
Estadio Centenario - Montevideo
About a month from now Chile comes to town for a match...definately planning on going to that match....nothing would be sweeter for fuBarrio than to have little Uruguay stomp the Chileans
I have alot more pics, but blogger is making me a bit crazy -- the last couple of days it's been unwilling to upload my pics without cutting off my connection. I'll try to remember to add them later.
ciao,
fuBarrio
Velodromo - Montevideo
Sunday, October 21, 2007
fuBarrio Shrugged
What can I say?
Is it that the world has finally come to its senses? No. I can't definitively say that is the case at all? Are there fewer absurdities to ridicule? No. Again, I wouldn't say that.
Why just today I was reading an article posted on the New York times about a professor who wrote a paper about gold and stocks.....he thinks that they are disconnected from their historical adverse relationship and either gold is anticipating inflation or it is *wrong* right now....his reason: inflation has gone down the last 5 years at the same time gold was going up. do professors shop, go to the hospital, pay tuition or drive cars?
the counter argument is that the gov't stats for inflation are cooked.
his "counter-counter" is that if the numbers are cooked, it's ok, cause he is only measuring changes in the cooked numbers to changes to the cooked numbers now....
uh, fuBarrio's counter counter counter is that you can't use something that can be CHANGED as a baseline for anything!!! the cpi measurements have changed countless times over that period, and in everycase I'm aware of, the changes understate price inflation.
Look, I realize that this story and my arguments against this egghead aren't backed up by links, direct quotes, or even a storyline that is easy to follow....And, it's the same reason that i haven't posted a lot lately:
I would have to chalk it up to good old fashioned apathy.
The reach of some egghead professor getting a writeup in the New York Times is mindboggling. Nevermind that his analysis is completely flawed, and as a matter of fact if you'd followed his advice up until now you'd have LOST MONEY.
It seems like anyone that doesn't have something to gain by having their voice heard is drowned out by the rampant commercialism of opinions these days.
Larry "cocaine" Kudlow was telling me - on CNBC where he's afforded an hour every day - gold was going back to 400 shortly before I came down to Uruguay because his connections at the Fed were bound and determined to crush out speculation as it was a signal to the market that inflation was cropping up.
Where is the "mea-culpa"???
Steve Forbes, riding the coattails of his old man's media empire made some monster prognostication that oil was going back to $35/barrel right before I came down to Uruguay. I think I just saw that it punctured the $90 mark in the front month futures contract.
The sad part is that Cocaine Kudlow and Steve Forbes will *always* have more influence, wealth, power, comfort, supporters, for themselves and their families than some doofus like fuBarrio. Their children will enter the ivy league schools, have the introductions to others in the halls of power and continue the incestuous inbreeding that is bifurcating our society into those that have and control and those that shine their shoes.
Were Forbes and Kudlow really serious that they believed these prognostications or were they asked to lie for a grander economic or political purpose???
Either way, they should be ashamed.....tarred and feathered....strung up by their gonads and ridiculed.
Is it so bad to make a prediction and be wrong? of course now, but how about a little bit of admission of fault. Forbes did a freakin' press junket in support of his absurd $35/barrel call.
What the Hell does Steve Forbes know about Oil? The sad thing is, he has name recognition (and a conduit to be heard), so people will listen to his "wishes" over the sound reasoning and science put forward by someone like Matthew Simmons who insists that Saudi Arabia is peaking (or has already peaked) with light sweet crude production.
In light of it all, is it any wonder that fuBarrio is shrugging?
ciao,
fuBarrio
Thursday, October 11, 2007
Money as Debt
In "the fourth turning" the authors say that in the fourth turning that people eventually tend to coalesce an understanding that a lot of their struggles, concerns and "undesirable effects" are all interrelated to a root cause (or two).
This video comes as close to explaining everything in a simple manner as I've ever seen. If you can sit through this 40 minute cartoon, there is plenty more of this kind of thing online....none quite so powerful as this one in its simplicity though.
http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=-9050474362583451279&hl=en
Enjoy,
fuBarrio
Saturday, October 06, 2007
Mortgage Meltdown 2007
Pretty amusing. Here's what's NOT amusing.....
Mortgage Meltdown
Whiskey Tango Foxtrot?
From the article when talking about borrowers who had bought way more house than they could really afford by getting an ARM with low "teaser" rates to make their payments low.....essentiall either betting on a huge change in household income in a couple of years or (more likely) continued appreciation bailing them out (yeah, that's responsible)....
"'Keep it at the starter rate. Convert it into a fixed rate. Make it permanent. And get on with it,' Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. Chairman Sheila Bair said in prepared remarks at an investor's conference. "
THAT is the solution being proposed by the CHAIRMAN of the FDIC? Yeah, no moral hazard there....
To quote the venerable Mogambo guru, "We're DOOMED! DOOMED I say!
ciao,
fubarrio
Friday, October 05, 2007
Uruguay Directory
I remember shaking my head at my friend "IBMikey" as he descended down the rabbit hole trying to figure out Joomla to launch his site http://www.outinuruguay.com/ Now, I'm starting to understand how he felt. I thankfully left behind this web stuff a LOOOONG time ago. Trying to push the last 7 years into a few months is getting a little overwhelming...however, we have had some small successes...
One of the latest sites that we launched is a Montevideo Uruguay Directory.
The idea is to give those people who have something to post of a commercial nature, a place to do it, instead of getting into fights over content that lives in the free forum.
It was sort of done one a budget (meaning NO budget) so we ended up using the PHP Bulletin Board software that is freeware. LUCKILY, we have a kindred spirit in the states that helped us set it up...I won't use his name here cuz he's a little sensitive about it (i think) but it's the same dude that made the sketch of my first fuBarrio gold coin.
In that vein, check it out and keep the heckling to a minimum. If someone knows of some sort of "craigslist-esque" open source software let me know. That could be the way we go for version 2. Once we've done enough "real" work to pay for all this distraction! :)
ciao,
fuBarrio
p.s. click here to check out the Uruguay Directory
Monday, October 01, 2007
266 isn't old -- if you're a Tree!
Of course, that was them...We're not old, right?
Let's see...
Did we just yesterday notice our kids rolling their eyes as we tried to interject the latest slang into our speech? It seems like just yesterday we were the ones rolling our eyes.
And for that matter, when did Madison Avenue get so "hip"?
I seem to remember they were always years behind the curve. "Old" people would chuckly maniacally as Madison avenue presented some "humorous" view on pop-culture....kids of course would notice that the representation of the kids on screen was about a year and a half out of date (a lifetime when your "with it"!)
But, 266 isn't so bad right....it's like the new 196, right?....or so those out-of-date Madison Avenue types try to tell us.
Lately though, fuBarrio has noticed that Uncle Sam isn't the only one on the decline. It started subtley. At first it was just small things. Almost straws in the wind. Lately though the evidence has begun mounting.
Ever since fuBarrio was a young (devil) pup he has joked about being "old".
Then, about 5 years ago, fuBarrio's younger friends stopped protesting such declarations
While single five years ago, and working at his job WAY too much to meet anyone, on the advice of aforementioned young/hip friends fuBarrio considered registering for online dating at match.com. fuBarrio decided not to when he noticed that the maximum age on the registration drop down was 35 :) -- hitting a little too close for home there.
fuBarrio's still limping after playing basketball with a bunch of octogenarians a couple of months ago
fuBarrio attended his 20 year reunion a couple of months ago
...but the most agredious of all the these indignities has to be.....
fuBarrio is losing his hair!!!!!
(oh the humanity)
Well, certainly there are many indignities awaiting us all on the way to puree dinners and adult diapers, but one issue bothers fubarrio more than others. Of course, not one to take such an unexpected course of events lying down (it always happens to the other guy) fuBarrio went on a made hunt for solutions. Below is a list of some options along with the short comments summarizing fuBarrio's initial research.
- becoming a "member" (har-har)
- lots of mysterious baseball hat wearing in inappriopriate situations
- aunt gemima bandana (actually saw brett michaels of poison fame trying to pull this one off on VH-1).
- Minoxidil
- Propecia
- Comb Over
- The Krylon solution
- Kojak Solution
Becoming a "member":
I think i have to actually lose more hair before this becomes a real option. The ads are full of pretty creepy dudes too...so that's a minus.
Ball Cap:
This one's pretty lame. 20 somethings can almost pull it off. I notice a lot of dudes only came to the informal Friday night portion of the (aforementioned) reunion. I couldn't tell if this was to avoid the 50 dollar charge for the Saturday dinner, or they didn't want to forced to show off their baldness. Probably a little of both.
I'd be a little more keen on this one if it didn't make my forehead breakout. Don't most people get to enjoy a period of time between breakouts and hairloss? :)
Aunt Jemima:
This one's closely related to the Ball Cap gambit. I wouldn't ordinarily think of it outside of the "hood", but I just saw Brett Michaels (of "Poison" (in)fame) trying to pull of this look on VH-1 -- For an entire series! :)
Minoxidil:
I'm not even sure they sell this in Uruguay, however, I did see on TV (in the states) that they sell it without prescription now -- so it's a LITTLE less humiliating. Probably not the good stuff though...just some watered down version. I got freaked out when a bald friend said that if you use it and stop, your hair returns to "trend". He was basically saying all the "treated" hairs that decided to stick around, which otherwise would not have, all fall out at once. Not sure if this is true but it sounds like "lock in" to me....or a serious barrier to adoption, as in my case.
Propecia:
This one seems a little better, especially if i could get the pill online from one of those email spammers! :) Of course, I had a *different* friend who looked into this for a pituitary problem (lots of weird side effects with pituitary tumors) and a specialist told him it decreases the volume of your "man sauce".
uh...I'm not shooting any movies or anything so it doesn't seem like such a big deal but then it leads me thinking that it sounds more like a *symptom* of a deeper more disturbing side effect of some kind. I'll prefer to wait a few more years for them to figure that one out.
Comb Over:
I said "266" not "666". 'nuff said. (I did see a sweet documentary on google on these though)
The Krylon Solution:
This one, from what I can tell in the late night infomercial is basically just spray paint....hence, the reason i call it the "krylon solution". Oh yeah, and they also throw in some cheap plastic combs too....This one seems better suited for:
- people balding in the back, not the front.
- people who live with lots of blind and/or delusional people
The Kojak Solution:
This one seems to be the most well-respected option these days. It was cool in the 70's...out in the 80's....came back again in the 90's and just hasn't faded out yet....or is that just my "non-hipness" again?
If my head wasn't so pointy, and my skin so pastey and/or i didn't live beneath a hole in the ozone layer this would be the "no brainer" option I think.
Anyone have a baseball hat that would look good on a blind dog?
ciao,
fuBarrio
Tuesday, September 25, 2007
Inverted Cup and Handle -- Again

ciao,
fuBarrio
Leveraging the Efforts of Others
Since I don't get out like I used to and take fotos of the city, AND people seem to enjoy my pictures of Montevideo a lot more than my endless rambling about how the sky is falling, I have found some nice pictures for you.
I'm not sure who took these, or who this blog belongs to, but nice job! :)
Make sure you scroll down far enough to see some of the old-school architecture....leave a comment....tell them that "fubarrio" sent you! :)
pictures of montevideo
Ciao,
fuBarrio
Thursday, September 20, 2007
Life in Uruguay
When we first moved to Montevideo without knowing anyone, or having every been to South America it was a pretty big leap. When Golden Lotus started questioning the move a few weeks before we left, I simply said, "hey, we'll go down, check it out...if we like it we'll stay....if we don't we'll leave."
That seemed to work. We arrived on the 12th of August and that August was *relatively* mild weather-wise and after about a month and half it had started to warm up. After this last winter, barring some unforeseen event we will NOT spend another winter in Uruguay.
Leave Uruguay (gasp!)
Well, the weather is only one part of the equation. Uruguay has a TON going for it, however after being here for a year+ it is lacking some things that we'd like to have around in the next few years too.
Now, before you hard-core lifers say, "well, duh" remember that 2/3 rds of my 3 person readership has never been to Uruguay.
It's choices for food are really limiting
Its cultural diversity is very limiting
It's professional opportunities are very limiting
The attitude of the people is not very open to foreign ideas or concepts
It's a little boring
(Golden Lotus entry) "the men are perverted" :)
(Golden Lotus entry) "no one knows how to cut non-mullet haircuts"
So, while a portion of our time may very well be spent in Uruguay, it will likely be that portion when a much larger percentage of the population is from somewhere else --- the summer! Our lease is expiring at the end of May with an option to extend for another six months. As of now, we do not intend on extending that lease.
Where to next, fuBarrio?
Well, that has yet to be decided. I'm goin to log off now and discuss it with Golden Lotus before she falls asleep.
Ciao,
fuBarrio
Paraisos Fiscales
Admittedly, even though I studied a little bit of Spanish before I arrived in Uruguay, I'd never heard this term before I got here.
Paraisos Fiscales basically translates as "fiscal paradises" -- or a more direct translation is "tax havens". To be considered a paraiso fiscal a place needs to shield money from another jurisdiction's taxation.
When I moved to Uruguay, there was *no* income tax -- not even for the locals. In one short year, that has become a fond memory. Of course, still holding my US citizenship has made this semi-irrelevant.
For US citizens we are taxed on *world-wide* income regardless of where we earn it. Luckily for us, we have an $80k/yr tax exclusion as long as we can prove we were actually residing outside of the US. I've heard numbers like 325 days/yr outside of the US, but I'm not certain there is a hard and fast rule. However, this is basically a subsidy for large multi-national corporations to give to expat Execs working overseas. Why do I say this? Well, income on investment income is taxed from the first dollar -- even when we are living in another country.
For Europeans, Australians, and other South Americans however, Uruguay is very much a paraiso fiscal.
Why is Uruguay a "paraiso fiscal"?
1.) strong banking secrecy laws
2.) strong protection for foreign property ownership (even US citizens are not obliged to disclose foreign real property ownership to the IRS (yet!) any bank account over 10k you are obliged to file a treasury dept form)
3.) foreign income for those living in Uruguay is not taxable (for those non-US citizens obviously).
In other words, if you are Australian and want to trade forex, and don't want to pay taxes on your gains....you can move to Uruguay and simply show that your money was sourced from investments made "offshore" and you are exempt.....at least that's MY understanding :)
So, yes, as far as Paraisos Fiscales go, in spite of recent political pressure to crack down, Uruguay is still very much famous for being a haven for foreign money (just have a look at some of the homes in Punta del Este with Argentinian plated luxury vehicles parked out front if you don't believe).....It's just not as a big of a haven for their own citizens and those that chose to make a living here.....
Hmmmmm....sound familiar? Ironically, the US is the biggest paraiso fiscal of them all...as long as you aren't (north) American! :)
ciao,
fuBarrio
Wednesday, September 19, 2007
Montevideo "Craps Out"
I was explaining to a co-worker that I started an online casino back in the 90's and that it is about a "no brainer" of a money maker that there is -- as long as you can do the marketing the operations is relatively straightforward, not a lot of innovation required, no inventory headaches....the only problems are hackers and thieves.
He argued that you had to have a lot of money to start a casino (once the infrastructure was in place) in case you lose some big bets.
I laughed and explained that probabilities and the law of large numbers had been worked out such that other than a 15 sigma event or other highly improbable outcome it was hard to have more than a losing day here and there.
The casinos, you see, for obvious reasons, have minimum and MAXIMUM bets on most games. This precludes the naive strategy of someone using a martingale strategy and simply doubling his bet until he comes out OK.
They also shy away (for the most part) from taking big one time bets. They are all about taking lots of the same bet over and over and letting the laws of large numbers work to their advantage. Some (very few) may have large proposition betting departments and lots have sports books which can see large lopsided bets on outcomes out of their control. However, in these cases, when a book has a very lopsided bet they will either edge the line in one direction or the other or, more likely, "lay off", some of their exposure to another book in the industry.
Even the online guys in Costa Rica had cordial working relationships with the other players in the market and would get on the horn before a big game if their exposure became too lopsided.
Anyways, all of this is just to express my utter fascination that their weren't arrests and a very public "perp walk" by some high profile casino execs after it came to public light that they lost money for a year.
Short of massive, gross incompetence and/or outright theft this is a virtual impossibility for a casino. If time and energy permits I'll get a copy of the original spanish article to post my source as a link here.
ciao,
fuBarrio
Tuesday, September 18, 2007
"Now What?" -- be Afraid....
Today, the Fed dropped the short term rates by 1/2 a percent.
Hooray!!! housing will be saved!!!
er, not so fast. As I remember, my home equity line (back when I had a house) was based off of LIBOR. LIBOR is some fancy acroynm for interbanking lending rate.
The reason the lenders insist on this is so that the Fed or some other NON-MARKET BASED price fixer doesn't set rates artificially too low and screw the mortgage holder.
Well, the people holding mortgages are screwed for a million other reasons, but in most cases, I believe those with resetting adjustable rate mortgages will have their rates tied to LIBOR....not the Fed funds rate.
But but but....won't this make it easier/cheaper for new buyers???
yes and no.....The "problem" is that the fed doesn't directly control long lending rates nor does it control what the market demands in the way of a risk premium over and above a Treasury to back Joe/Juan Six-Pack's Half-million dollar mcstucco crap-box dream.
in addition, cutting the short term rates is killing the dollar right now, and that is goin to force foreign buyers of dollar paper to seek a higher rate of return to offset the currency risk......oops.
on the positive side of the ledger, although residential housing sucks right now because the utility as a shelter is WAY WAY overpriced to buy (and by extension to buy as an investment to rent out) there will eventually be some other property perhaps that becomes attractive to foreigners if the dollar tanks relative to their currencies.
"luckily" for the dollar, the EU is trying to liquify away their mess, Japan has political problems right now, and even the formerly tough Bank of England finally had to blink ( a little ) and agree to lend Northern Rock some funds to head off complete insolvency in the face of an old fashioned bank run (exascerbated by the fact that people could go online and withdraw AFTER normal banking hours)
so, "now what?" is answered with those tired old lines....look to diversify your holdings out of just dollars and out of just paper priced in dollars....especially if your salary, retirement, savings (everything) is in that one dollar.
but, beware of other paper assets as well....look for a little bit of precious metals, some grains perhaps, and maybe some energy assets as well.
if you want to make a paper bet, bet on long term interest rates going up -- even in the face of the Fed easing today -- I know, "crazy", huh?
ciao,
fuBarrio
p.s. I couldn't believe how lucid and clear Greenspan was on sixty minutes now that he's out of the Federal Reserve chairmanship....Funny, he wouldn't make any comments on what he's investing in other than to say he's diversified....Then, he goes on to say, expect inflation and long term rates to come back after a 25 year hiatus. :) uh....
p.p.s. my friend wants google to find her new personal blog so.... odeliza jacoba
Sunday, September 16, 2007
"Sell in May and Go Away"....Now what?
uranium juniors, gold juniors (and majors), and silver stocks have been HAMMERED this summer.
then, almost on queue, the big money got back from the beach after labor day and things started moving up in these assets again.
Ok, so is it time to reenter these positions (if you got out)? should you get in if you never had a position?
First, a review....basically, my original thesis remains intact (somewhat)
namely:
- everyone should stop speculating in housing. if you can sell your primary residence and rent, do it.
- housing turbulence would kill the mortgaged backed paper market, and infect even higher grades than subprime and eventually the commercial paper market
- liquidity would get really shaky
- the US dollar index would break 80 to the downside
- we could see some bank runs and smaller regional overleveraged players falling first (just starting to play out)
- it would be challenging to find a hidin place as liquidity dried up everything would tank at first even traditional "safe havens"
- the "x" factor would be the central bankers' response....would they inflate/liquify the markets in an attempt to forestall or avoid calamity (of one kind in return for the other) and the political response (see recent proposal to liquify markets by raising limits for fannie mae backed home loan)
To date, when Wall Street has cried over their lost million dollar bonuses, the Fed has blinked and liquified the markets....massively....The European Central bank, ditto....to a lesser extent the UK.
This liquidity will find a home and it won't be new subprime homeloans.....any guesses where it might go?
(to be continued)
fuBarrio
Wednesday, September 12, 2007
Offshore Bank Wires -- in Hollywood
How do you make something as boring as "banking" sound sexy? Easy, just add in a dash of "offshore"....
Viola! Now you are dealing with arms merchants, spies, monopolistic cartels, money launderers, dirty CEOs, and drug lords.
The movies do a good job of glorifying the profession (while villifying it) and making it look a whole lot more sophisticated than my brief experience has shown it to be.
I crack up everytime someone sends an Offshore Bank Wire in a movie like Mission Impossible or "Firewall". The thief (or other unsavory type) types in his account, encryption key...pushes a couple of more buttons, and then sees a graphic onscreen filling up like an mp3 download tracking the progress.

Question: why would it take longer to wire transfer 200 million dollars than it does 2 dollars? :) technically i guess you have to send an extra 6 zeros over the wire (in binary...gasp!) but....long enough to have a progress indicator? :)
While my company recently implemented online banking, and we have fancy encryption keys, etc. However, a lot of processes -- especially sending wires to international accounts have a good deal of "hands on" processes that are still handled by people....and there is a reason....as some say, "three feet of air is still the hardest firewall to crack".
Tuesday, September 11, 2007
Gov't to Irradicate Inflation through Intervention
The article below is a translation as it ran in Uruguay Daily News today. It's amazing that they never think, "hey stop creating money faster than people create goods and services" is a solution...
Government Announces 7 Measures Against Inflation
Uruguay News
Yesterday, at a meeting between the President and the Ministers, Economy Minister Danilo Astori presented a package with seven measures to stop inflation.
This measures will entail a USD 65 million fiscal effort with the objective to act directly on four products which, according to the official analysis, are directly responsible for the rise in inflation: fuel, meat, wheat products, fruits and vegetables. The economy ministry has repeated several times that these products account for 60% of the increase in prices this year (4.74% out of 8.23%).
Vázquez’s cabinet and Frente Amplio party members expressed their support for Astori on the new measure. The PIT-CNT labor union applauded the government’s measures but considered them to be “insufficient.”
National Commerce and Services Chamber consultant María Dolores Benavente, called the government’s measures “positive.”
-According to information given by official sources to Últimas Noticias newspaper, last night, state energy company UTE received the price list of basic family products sent by the Economy Ministry Commerce Direction so UTE can print and distribute the list with their next bill. Yesterday, the Commerce Bureau received prices on 40 products and close to 100 items of merchandise sold in different parts of the country. Prices were processed and immediately sent to UTE.
-UTE rates will fall (4.3%) at a cost of USD 25 million annually and a 6% increase will be postponed until June 2008. This measure will take effect in January and will imply a USD 30 million decline in income for the state company.
-Fixed charges in ANTEL telephone rates will also fall 6.5% at a cost of USD 7 million annually.
-August CPI figures (1.73%) led the Economy Ministry to eliminate taxes paid by public companies for foreign currencies earlier than expected. The tax elimination, which was part of the new tax reform, was expected to be applied in January 2008 but was moved forward, at a cost of USD 8 million for the state (and USD 25 million less in collections for the state annually). The decree has already been created and will be signed next Monday by the ministers’ council.
-VAT exemptions on poultry at a cost of USD 2 million that will affect 17% of consumer prices and the acceleration of procedures to start vegetable exports and cause a slight reduction on prices for those products.
-Health care services will fall between 2% and 2.5%, which will be financed by employer contributions as planned by the tax reform.
-The government is planning a 2% reduction in fuel, which will be financed by the decline in the dollar exchange rate. State fuel company ANCAP parameters were calculated with an exchange rate of UYP 23.75 per dollar and last week the dollar closed at UYP 23.15.
The government expects to slightly affect inflation for October, November and December to keep inflation in the single digits for the year.
(Ultimas Noticias, Observa, 11 September 2007)
Wednesday, September 05, 2007
Introducing "Uruguay Guy"
Ok....I swear it isn't a gay porn site....Although that idea has a lot more promise of profitability.
UruguayGuy.com will eventually be a site that has some relatively useful stuff and links to information for "foreigners", visitors, expats, coming to Uruguay.
In the beginning I'm going to focus on some pretty elementary stuff just to give people another resource and maybe a little more comfort in the trip/move/relocation they are considering.
For now, until I get the website pointing to my blog, uruguayguy can be found at Moving to Uruguay
ciao,
fuBarrio