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Encore of Financial Collapse?

"...it is remarkable to watch the same financial institutions that almost wrecked our nation’s economy work to heighten risks in the system." AGREE. Along with efforts to hand out cheap money to home buyers who cannot afford a home, the Federal government is moving us closer to an encore of the financial collapse of 2007-2009. I plan to chronicle this steady movement toward the next financial crisis with postings such as this. Although it may be many years distant, the next crisis is inevitable and leveraged banks and real estate will almost certainly be involved.

Kicking Dodd-Frank in the Teeth
NY Times | By Gretchen Morgenson Jan 19, 2015
The 114th Congress has been at work for less than a week, but a goal for many of its members is already evident: a further rollback of regulations put in place to keep markets and Main Street safe from reckless Wall Street practices. The attack began with a bill that narrowly failed in a fast-track vote on Wednesday in the House of Representatives. It is scheduled to come up again in the House this week. Read More
By |2018-07-02T10:43:25-07:00January 16th, 2015|Financial Commentary - Public|0 Comments

China Bans Uber

What due Red China, the Cities of San Francisco, New York and Las Vegas, to name a few, have in common? They ban Uber the quintessential free market innovation, most likely due to pressure from unions and the politicians who collect fees and limit access to transportation for citizens.

"China bans private drivers in taxi app clampdown"
Reuters | SHANGHAI Thu Jan 8, 2015 9:29pm EST
(Reuters) - China's transport ministry has banned taxi hailing apps such as Uber Technologies Inc and local rivals Kuaidi Dache and Didi Dache from using cars and drivers without taxi licenses in a bid to regulate the rapidly growing sector. The nationwide ban comes after authorities in the Chinese city of Chongqing began investigating Uber in December over concerns that its drivers were not properly licensed. Read More
By |2018-07-02T10:43:25-07:00January 16th, 2015|Financial Commentary - Public|0 Comments

Far-reaching Implications of Swiss Bank Decision

The author of this article has a diplomatic (or elliptical) way of expressing that, because European politicians have failed to change policies that make it very expensive to start new businesses or hire (or fire) workers, economic activity is stuck in neutral there. Most European nations are socialist, taxing businesses, especially small businesses in the form of high benefits, short work weeks, long mandated vacations and severe penalties for laying people off during difficult times. This discourages creative entrepreneurs from bothering to take the risk of starting new ventures.

"Implications of the SNB decision extend far beyond Switzerland"
By Mohamed El-Erian January 15, 2015 5:57 pm
You need only look at the immediate reaction of the foreign exchange markets to the Swiss National Bank’s announcement on Thursday that it was dismantling its one-sided currency peg against the euro to get a sense of the momentous and surprising nature of the decision. Read More
By |2018-07-02T10:43:25-07:00January 16th, 2015|Financial Commentary - Public|0 Comments

Consistency Is a Virtue for Financial Advisors

Does anyone remember Elaine Garzarelli? Henry Kaufman? Martin Zwieg? These were widely quoted market gurus of the '70's and '80's who got one or two predictions right, then became media darlings. None were successful actually handling real money for real people. Consistency is an under appreciated virtue in my business. Trusted Financial Advisors values this virtue.

"Whitney's Fund Said to Drop 11% as Office Put on Market"
By Max Abelson Dec 21, 2014 6:36 PM PT
Dec. 22 (Bloomberg) –- Meredith Whitney, who started a hedge fund after becoming one of Wall Street’s most famous analysts, is facing tough times. Bloomberg’s Max Abelson reports on “In The Loop.” (Source: Bloomberg)
Read More
By |2018-07-02T10:43:25-07:00December 22nd, 2014|Financial Commentary - Public|0 Comments

Today’s Eisenhower Economy

Emerging from the scariest Recession (note the capital “R”) in three generations, America seems to be enjoying a well- mannered economic recovery the likes of which were probably last seen in the 1950’s. Let’s summarize the good news, for those of you too impatient to read this entire blog post:

  1. Low inflation -- should continue
  2. Low interest rates -- little risk of a sharp rise
  3. Rising employment -- New jobs are being created at the rate of over 200,000 per month
  4. Good consumer confidence -- people are spending on cars, remodeling, dining out and vacationing again
  5. Buoyant stock market
  6. Buoyant housing market
  7. Buoyant retail sales
  8. Complacency - there does not appear to be a likelihood of some great social upheaval as in the 1960’s and 1970’s
By |2018-07-02T10:43:25-07:00October 6th, 2014|Financial Commentary - Public|0 Comments

Big Day & Week for Kinder Morgan Investors

This energy transportation company was the financial headline du jour on Monday August 11. The company is really a “family” of companies all under the oversight of Richard Kinder who once was CFO at Enron, which became a House of Fraud after his departure. Over the past 18 years he has overseen the growth of his company from a handful of natural gas pipelines to what is now the third largest energy company in the world. We have invested our clients capital in one or more of the Kinder Morgan entities since early 2004, enjoying average annual returns in the double digits with steadily rising dividends all along the way.

By |2018-07-02T10:43:25-07:00August 14th, 2014|Financial Commentary - Public|0 Comments

Quarter End Report June 30, 2014

This was one of the best quarters and is one of he best half-years for our Balanced-Value style of investing that I can recall in our 13+ year history. Most client accounts will see a half year cash flow adjusted increase in the range of 7% to 10%, topping the performance of broad stock and bond indices. Our superior performance was driven by a relatively heavy weighting to the energy industry which had been under market suspicion until things began to unravel in Iraq in June. An ocean of new oil is being produced in North America with more to come, and as with natural gas, there is worry that oil prices may become depressed for a time by surplus. However, the unexpected sweep by extremist Muslims into Northern Iraq seems to have driven investors to buy energy companies, despite little movement in the benchmark Brent Crude price. Since our approach to energy is dominated by ownership of pipelines, and because these stocks are in high demand for their dividends, our clients enjoyed a double barreled lift to their portfolios as both energy and utilities were among the strongest performing sectors in the past quarter.

The quarter’s performance was aided by new price highs for a number of our holdings.

The Fixed Income Story

Meanwhile, surprising the consensus, including me, was the strong showing of bonds as interest rates stubbornly refuse to rise, even after five years of economic recovery. I reduced bond holdings a year or so ago in the face of the first significant correction in bond prices in five years. At the time it appeared the long predicted turn for interest rates was upon us. Not so. Rates have backed off...

By |2018-07-02T10:43:26-07:00June 30th, 2014|Financial Commentary - Public|0 Comments

Market Update and Portfolio Approach April 24, 2014

It was about five years ago that the current equities bull market began, although you would have had to search far and wide to find any investor, professional or retail, who properly called that bottom at that time.  At Trusted Financial, suspecting we were in a bottoming pattern, we were continuing our program of selective buying of stocks and bonds at what were bargain prices. Please take a few minutes to read the words I wrote for our Trusted Advisor Client Newsletter - April, 2009.

For Quarter ending March 31 2014, client accounts saw a modest gain of 2% to 3%. This topped most domestic stock indices. New price highs were experienced in cyclical holdings and in non-cyclicals such as Utilities. In other words, it was a pretty satisfying quarter.

Fixed Income Strategy
I share a widely held belief that we are in the trough of interest rates and that the next move will be higher. However, this change appears likely to manifest itself only gradually. I’m not one who believes that the massive money creation by monetary authorities across the planet will lead to runaway inflation or to interest rates rocketing upward to contain it. That was the scenario between 1972 and 1981, but that was forty years ago and something has changed: productivity. We are still in the early-to-mid innings of an electronic (i.e. silicon based) productivity revolution. Fewer employees can accomplish more tasks at lower costs than at any time in the past fifty years and this trend continues apace. Labor costs, on a unit of production basis are falling. Further, the North American energy bonanza will, for decades, dampen the cost of energy, a key input to inflation.

By |2018-07-02T10:43:29-07:00April 24th, 2014|Financial Commentary - Public|0 Comments

TFA Update February 10, 2014

As we approach the half-way point for the current quarter (was New Year’s Day that long ago?), I wanted to briefly summarize financial market news and our response thereto. Hope was surging along with the market as the books were closed on 2013. As indicated at our client Holiday Luncheon in December and in private conversations with some clients, value investors such as ourselves have been uncomfortable with the dramatic lift off in share prices that manifested itself so widely during the last three months of 2013....

By |2018-07-02T10:43:30-07:00February 10th, 2014|Financial Commentary - Public|0 Comments

Year-end Report 2013

Finally, after thirteen years, the broad U.S. stock indices achieved inflation-adjusted records in 2013. Responsible investors with a functioning memory were unlikely to have participated in the 30% rise of U.S. Equities, because no one in their right mind committed their entire liquid net worth to such a volatile vehicle. For those of us who had a substantial amount in stocks, along with other vehicles, the overall results have been decent, pretty much in line with Trusted Financial’s long-term rate of return.

 The truth about stock ownership is that it has been only a marginally productive endeavor over the past 13 years, once performance is adjusted down for the effects of lost buying power (aka “inflation.”) ...

By |2018-07-02T10:43:30-07:00January 14th, 2014|Financial Commentary - Public|0 Comments
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