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Messages - Bevan

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61
Off topic / Re: Live chat
« on: December 07, 2018, 10:41:31 am »
When? You gotta love prophets who don't clarify their predictions.  :)

Personally I agree we will get back to around 10 on USD, but in around 2-3 years time. For now we are more likely to bounce around the 14 - 15 level, until elections and the Eskom crisis is over. The silver lining with Eskom could hopefully be that we see it break up into generation - transmission - distribution, and we get a deregulated power market, and steadily falling prices.... Wow, that would be nice, and we could finally join the developing world with a free market.

62
Shares / Re: Buyer: Mind the Gap - Don't Buy the Dip
« on: December 06, 2018, 05:27:50 pm »
Daily momentum on DJIA just turned negative. Tomorrow could be a nasty day, if no support kicks in. Wonder if the Plunge Protection Team is still active these days? Although probably out of pocket due to all the Fed's spending of last few years....

63
Shares / Re: Buyer: Mind the Gap - Don't Buy the Dip
« on: November 20, 2018, 10:00:57 pm »
...
Let me tell you my story that I have already told here before your time and the older members may recall it even from the old Sharechat forum.
...

Guess I must have missed your story. I was also migrated from the early days of the sharechat forum although my posts here are generally few and far between. Of course individual shares can offer incredible returns over time. Warren Buffett is famously able to pick some of these. Very few others can, in the fullness of time.

As for the baby-boomers kids seeing to it... Well, research shows that their grandchildren are seriously under-invested in the market. They prefer to "experience" life and travel etc. Like wow, ah-we man, have you experienced the Pamplona Bull Run yet, or Diwali on Goa? The Boomer's kids themselves are fewer in number than the baby-boomer generation, hence the fact that most retirement plans are seriously underfunded i.e. not enough new contributors to cover current benefits.

Of course we must all do what we do. I don't give a continental whether anyone listens to my ponderings here or not. In many ways bulletin boards simply offer a way to jot down one's thoughts. But it would be foolish to outright ignore what many people are starting to think now.

64
Shares / Re: Buyer: Mind the Gap - Don't Buy the Dip
« on: November 20, 2018, 09:16:10 pm »
This is a great video to watch on the coming retirement crisis.... Some great insights on the future of the financial system, entrepreneurship as well.




65
Shares / Re: Buyer: Mind the Gap - Don't Buy the Dip
« on: November 20, 2018, 09:10:54 pm »
... and Optionsellers.com goes bust with the CEO's apology video already being parodied across the net. Selling deep out the money options is a great trade, about 90% of the time. Problem is, the remaining 10% of the time will bite you every single time, especially if you have not covered your delta. In NatGas you need to be seriously covered as vol can range intra-day between 10% to 80%.

It's definitely not a bust like Lehman Bros but some of their clients will be seriously pissed off. They had probably invested their profits already, only to learn that they won't be getting any. Ah well, c'est la vie! 

66
Shares / Re: Buyer: Mind the Gap - Don't Buy the Dip
« on: November 20, 2018, 08:53:36 pm »
Also, I think we're heading for $50 oil once more. Demand destruction, oil gluts etc. 2019 will likely see the collapse of several Middle East economies as well. This could destabilise the whole Arabian Gulf and lead to potential sabre rattling, which will only unsettle markets as well. Then again, 1st world economies love a good war. Nothing helps stoke profits more than artificially inflated prices in war time. Trump would also love nothing more than to be a war-time President, as that's the only thing better than being a plain old US President. Of course all that extra spending will only serve to hasten the day of reckoning of the US having to deal with its debt. Expect several shutdowns of the US government in 2019 as the debt ceiling is breached time and time again... Thankfully the US public seems to do better when government shuts down and gets out of the way.

67
Shares / Buyer: Mind the Gap - Don't Buy the Dip
« on: November 20, 2018, 08:28:05 pm »
With markets in sell-off mode, you can expect a slew of news articles coming out about how one should always buy and hold in stock markets long-term. Well, that may have been true for the past 50 years but we are facing a very different future now.

The baby-boomer generation (born after WW2) threw away the austerity of their parents and were responsible for fuelling the mass consumerism we have today. The money men of Wall Street convinced them not to save for retirement but rather to give their money to the bankers and brokers and they would grow it in the markets. Of course this worked quite well while the baby boomers and their children have all been earning salaries. The massive bull run in stock markets we've seen since 1950, apart from a few minor corrections along the way, has been fuelled by boomers and everyone else seeking ever higher risk returns. The music has hardly stopped playing, until now....

Because those baby boomers are now all retiring en-masse. They are not earning like they used to and they are not buying the dips like they used to. Their children and grandchildren are mostly mortgaged and indebted (house, student loans etc.) up to their eyeballs with expensive property and toys. With markets in sell-off mode, we can expect greater and greater runs to the safety of cash and boring instruments such as government bonds. We should not expect markets to recover quickly again as there simply isn't the volume of readily investable cash lying around any more. The retirees need it now.

The 2008 GFC saw a massive deleveraging of wealth from consumers to businesses and HNW's who were able to turn the easy money into easy profits, in housing and stocks. This has created an even greater wealth disparity and inequality across the world. The average man in the street in New York, London, Sydney and Maputo feels poorer than ever before, and that's without hardly any inflation at all.

Pension and tracker funds have propped up markets for the longest time now. Of course we can expect these to continue but in an uncertain world with rising interest rates and inflation, and with low growth (even in the US) the best we can expect is stagflation. I've said this before here but Japan was once the world's no. 2 economy before stagflation hit them in the 90's. They're only kinda recovering now.

Yes, of course markets will recover. But I suspect we're in the early stages of a slow grind downwards. As I said here before, this feels like October 2007 again, where there was a slow but steady decline, before the final crash came in 2008. Depending on how macro events play out here, I expect a similar situation this time, only at twice the speed now. So we should know if we're into proper crash mode by Christmas / early Jan, or if this is just a prelude.

Either way, I reckon the fundamentals of the stock market are changing for good now. Too many people chasing returns. The mathematics of Capitalism doesn't work like that i.e. it asymmetrically rewards the top 20% with great wealth, whilst the bottom 80% must get less than average returns.

68
Off topic / Re: Seeking advice on weekly report
« on: November 10, 2018, 09:01:51 am »
Ha, ha... no problem.

My brief bio is:-
- Mining engineer in SA for awhile
- Co-founded world's online coal exchange www.globalcoal.com and sold to Anglo, BHP, Glencore etc.
- Commodity trader for Macquarie (futures & options trading book with $100m VAR) and RMB in London, then becoming RMB's head of energy & metals trading desk in JHB
- Helped develop international coal ETF and FNB's Kruger Rand business
- Ran London Commodity Brokers SA office for some time, then worked for Thebe Investment Corp, running mining incubator and impact investing into several community and township ventures. Did corporate finance for Shell Trading, Burgan Cape Town terminal, setup two oil trading companies, major SA coal company to buy Anglo coal assets....
- Now I've setup Thrive Centre in Hogsback with my partner who has a lifetime of experience living off-grid in the Transkei, and who knows more about soil and sustainability than I ever will

The idea is not to try and convince people I know what to buy / sell etc. The idea is to try and offer some practical advice on trading strategies, discipline, starting and running businesses, raising finance, and of course cutting your costs with practical, nature-based living, how to go off-grid, using grey water effectively for wetlands and irrigating food, making own cheese, butter etc.

I was simply wondering what questions and information people might want to know on the trading and investing side, as I believe my background has offered me unique insights into many things. Although granted, I'm much more of a trader than an investor...  :)

In terms of trading success, it's very easy to be successful trading on a bank's balance sheet. You simply have to have bigger balls than the next guy and then wait it out for the market to prove your position right... I joke of course. Once I lost over $1m on a Friday afternoon and it took 2 weeks to make that back. But generally I ran around 12% return on my book, bearing in mind that many trades are often given to you by other departments e.g. hedging for project finance, and they might prove negative in your book, but positive somewhere else in the bank.

69
Off topic / Re: Live chat
« on: November 10, 2018, 08:46:42 am »
Top 40 is heading for a crash setup

Doubt it. Market already quite oversold and recent profit-taking hasn't even hit the 50% retracement level of last week's move. Medium term momentum is going into positive territory. So not exactly boom or bust, better to sit on interest-earning liquid bonds for now.

But watch Nassim Taleb on youtube about how the system is more fragile now than in 2007 going into GFC. Couldn't agree with him more. All that QE has found its way into the market. Household debt has become corporate and government debt now, and interest rates are starting to push up fast around the world. No nation in history has even been able to handle an excessive debt bubble and the US is not immune, even though they have the world's reserve currency. The GFC led to an excessive widening between rich and poor as the rich milked the system on easy money. Expect a levelling pretty soon with property (especially high-end) coming in for some of the earliest and biggest knocks. Then the markets will of course bleed. What we've seen so far is just early jitters from the professional community. But the dumb money and tracker funds have all kept investing, keeping a bottom under the market.

The global crash is coming although it's impossible to tell when. Meanwhile, best to keep watching momentum for those early signals....

70
Off topic / Seeking advice on weekly report
« on: November 09, 2018, 09:41:42 pm »
I'm thinking of starting a weekly report, the idea being there are two ways to improve the material quality of your life.... 1) Increase Revenues, and 2) Reduce Costs. Called the "Thrive Report", it will have advice on practical ways to reduce costs, mostly in terms of food, water and energy savings. Stuff that even city folk in apartments can do.

But I'm looking for your advice on what you'd want to see in the "Increase Revenues" section. As an ex professional trader I can give some insights into trading discipline, market timing, trend and momentum analysis. I can also run a model portfolio of stocks, commodities, currencies etc. for anyone interested to follow. I can give research insights into key commodities and the top 40 stocks. As an impact investor, entrepreneur and project / corporate finance guy I can also advise on raising investments, financial modelling, key issues for entrepreneurs, product and business development etc.

The report will be weekly and cost less than a grand per year, the idea being it needs to be packed with money making and money saving tips. The problem is that there are so many "gurus" around and I don't really want to be just another talking head. Hence I'm soliciting views on what you think would be most useful for you to know, bearing in mind that no-one has a crystal ball or time machine. Of course I'll give everyone who contributes something useful here a free subscription for a few weeks.

71
Off topic / Re: Live chat
« on: October 31, 2018, 10:00:06 am »
Agree with gcr. SA only really has room to move upwards from here, after next year's elections. But we could end up becoming a net food importer and that will cost us dearly. Global equity markets should see a nice bounce this week and perhaps next week too, but we are not out the woods yet. Trump's trade rhetoric, US debt issues and bond market wobbles have all seen cash fleeing equities so that markets will likely end in the red this year. However, I reckon best Xmas presents will be equities as next year should see a nice recovery, albeit not shooting the lights out.

72
Off topic / Re: Live chat
« on: October 30, 2018, 09:58:07 am »
The 2008 crash started in late 2007 as confidence slowly started being eroded, leading to a mass exodus. Whilst I don't think we're going to see a crash just yet, I wouldn't be piling into the market right now. Things have changed dramatically over the last year with US interest rates. High rate environments chase money out of stock markets. The professional money has been leaving while widows, orphans, dentists and shoe-shiners have been trying to prop up the market lately. We are a long way from capitulation still...

73
Off topic / Re: Live chat
« on: October 29, 2018, 08:56:06 am »
Blood is good, I want to buy stuff on the low. (we need a bear market, it's been a decade since the last one.)

As Orca says, SA has been in a bear market of late. SA typically runs counter-trend to other markets with Rand hedge effects as well. I expect US and European markets to keep taking some hits for a while, whilst SA stocks should find some support quite soon. The pro-business Ramaphosa approach should also start having an impact within about 6 months, freeing up investment capital and growth in SA markets.

74
Off topic / Live chat
« on: October 17, 2018, 12:26:29 pm »
uh Patrick, can you check out the price feed for the NewWave USD currency ETN please.... I seem to have lost all my capital in the comp as price has gone to zero...

75
Off topic / Re: Live chat
« on: October 15, 2018, 07:02:52 am »
Anyone else thinking it's looking like buying time? I have some cash due to clear in a few days...

Remember the crash of 2008 began in Oct / Nov 2007.... I'm seeing similar patterns in monthly and weekly momentum now. Of course we could pull out of it but then again, when the US finally has to face its debt mountain, the financial world will implode. Trump is trying to grow his way out of the problem but its having knock-on effects around the planet. Everything is inter-connected now and when the US goes down it will take everything with it.

The gold bugs are starting to froth at the mouth again....  :) On another note, I appear to be losing more than my entire capital on the leaderboard. Something is seriously up with the feed for the NewWave USD:ZAR Currency ETN.

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