Quote from DeltaSpread:
Maybe you read too fast through my details or I was not specific enough. Let me amplify a bit more. For the first six months of 2009, I accumulated nothing but high trench A level company quality bonds, like Prudential, JPMorgan, Goldman Sachs, SunAmerica etc. with various time frames between 15-25 years. I got them all at steep discounts below par because of all the market craziness at that time.
When I extrapolate this though with what I already have accumulated that I detailed above; over the course of the next decade, it comes out to somewhere around 10% annually.
I suspect as of a couple of years ago, people thought Bear, Lehman, AIG and CitiBank were also similar to the companies you mention before summer-fall 2008.
In 2000, people were bidding up web & telecomm companies to 700X next year's rose-colored-glasses earnings. 8-person companies with an idea and no sales were suddenly worth $50 million. In 2003, most of these had gone into the toilet. It was all about #eyeballs and other unfounded metrics.
In the late 90s, the Asian currency crisis had stock markets and currencies down as much as 80-90% in short order.
On Oct. 19?, 1987, the stock market was down 22+% in one day.
In the 80s, people were buying carloads of Topps, Score, Donruss and other baseball cards. Such as boxes of every player for a year. Since baseball cards were appreciating 20% a year, why not? Then of course, the companies ramped up production, and the value of these loads of baseball cards seemed to go nowhere for many years.
In other words, there is no low risk to your strategy, it is one more guess in a world of guesses. You put in your trade, and are hoping your strategy works out. No problem with that, we all do it, but it is still just your hypothesis.
You may have bought on lows, but there is no extrapolating in this kind of environment. Everything everywhere can disappear