If you can't make sense of the $VIX analogy it's you who is too stupid to compete. Risk was under weighed by not only credit agencies and Wall Street traders but by options traders. A good portion of ET blew up last year being short puts.
Don't take this wrong but in all likelihood I was positioned way before you in recognizing these problems. (see below) I was getting short because it was CLEAR that housing was rolling over hard. Traders anticipate future valuations-agencies rate the here and now.
For a generation Dick Fuld was far from an idiot. He was one of the best traders on Wall Street. Do you think any other credible trader believes Dick Fuld was duped by credit agencies? He was wrong and loaded up. Period.
Institutions created higher yield products to attract capital. Duh. In a world of FDIC/SIPC/AIG insured securities you either offered investors yield or you sat and watched the parade go by. In turn pension funds ate this shit up because they're under funded (ala' GM and CALPERS) and need to suck up high yield to pay out benefits. If Treasury rates were 8% no one would have touched these securities but for those who need more that 3% a year they were GOLDEN. Bad bet. For years they were a good bet. Plenty of funds bought this stuff in 2002 and made a mint. But all I am is a bettor. I'll let you academic fucks tell me what's going on after it happens.
Whether you're a 1 lot trader on ET or the managing director of an IB you'd better learn to take responsibility for your own actions.
From a journal entry here last January:
Don't take this wrong but in all likelihood I was positioned way before you in recognizing these problems. (see below) I was getting short because it was CLEAR that housing was rolling over hard. Traders anticipate future valuations-agencies rate the here and now.
For a generation Dick Fuld was far from an idiot. He was one of the best traders on Wall Street. Do you think any other credible trader believes Dick Fuld was duped by credit agencies? He was wrong and loaded up. Period.
Institutions created higher yield products to attract capital. Duh. In a world of FDIC/SIPC/AIG insured securities you either offered investors yield or you sat and watched the parade go by. In turn pension funds ate this shit up because they're under funded (ala' GM and CALPERS) and need to suck up high yield to pay out benefits. If Treasury rates were 8% no one would have touched these securities but for those who need more that 3% a year they were GOLDEN. Bad bet. For years they were a good bet. Plenty of funds bought this stuff in 2002 and made a mint. But all I am is a bettor. I'll let you academic fucks tell me what's going on after it happens.
Whether you're a 1 lot trader on ET or the managing director of an IB you'd better learn to take responsibility for your own actions.
From a journal entry here last January:
from Pa(b)st Prime:
Sill long 1480 and 1440 Jan puts and short 1400's. I've been scalping futures from the long side against my puts and got lucky Thursday by catching them both ways on Bernanke. I was burned in Nov/Dec by virtually the same spread so I'm very quick to buy futures. Because vols come in on the rallies I can underweight my delta hedge knowing that my short gamma will make up the diff. I have a total of 4 1480's and 6 1440's against 8 of the 1400's. As a rule I trade 5 ES long against the puts but if my hedge is done at a crappy area I'll add another 5 ES on weakness. Naturally I'd rather not do that on the coming -1000 DIA day.
Sentiment, as too many seem to know, is begging for a bounce. AAll, ISE and CBOE p/c's, ET polls and just talking to other traders, most everyone hates the market. We all know you're to fade the crowd and the crowd's either short or bearish enough to be getting short. This is one of those times that I believe the crowd is right.
I've talked earlier in the thread about football betting and sentiment. Reading consensus is a great indicator but no guaranteed be all. Just the fact that guy's who a month ago never heard of sentiment are now talking about "that fadable AAll survey" and "the retail morons are buying puts" makes me think fading the fade is the fade. Just the same I'll make judicious use of buying futures if the break doesn't seem in the offing.
Another thing. I talked about (I think I did lol) about how Bhutto was very, very big market wise. Just another instability nail, right? Notice we've never been to her asassination levels since. Well along the same lines, Friday's debacle in American Express is HUGE. The premier credit card company in the world-Amex customers have scant in common with WaMu's motley crew of borrowers-if AMEX is seeing bad things, then bad things are happening. No matter what the next 50 SPX points bring, don't be ignorant to reality. We're slipping not just into recession but into all out economic calamity. The world is broke. Don't buy into the China story either. Yea 30 million Chinese are living in Hi-Rises and drinking Lattes. A quarter billion of them are also virtually unemployed. If anything the emerging trend will be strife and labor unrest amoung emerging workers. Bet on it.
Why's gold rallying on asset devaluation? Read the above. There's folks who're increasingly scared to hold currency. They won't buy stocks, bonds or real estate because of excess valuations so they're forced into gold by default. Those who own it aren't selling because a. no where else to go and b. their macro word view is becoming the stark reality.
Good trading to everyone.
Quote from Anaconda:
You have a lot to learn. You do not even understand how ratings agencies function and their role in the industry. Comparing the VIX to credit ratings, just wow. What are you smoking?
Do you even know that the pension & sovereign funds which bought the worthless paper cannot buy anything not rated A or above? Obviously not.
It's amazing, truly amazing how in denial so many people are. I just give up. Good luck with the next few years, not that it will help you considering how clueless you choose to be.
