Ken Heebner: "We've passed the point of maximum (housing) distress."

Quote from JamesVU2000:

Obviously Ken Heebner has been great, but the draw back to his strategy is the are highly concentrated.

I just read steve cohens interview in alpha magazine and he commented that the only way to outperform is to make concentrated theme bets.

Problem is if you get caught you give a way a lot with those strategies quickly.

Ken Heebner's outperformance is not just derived from his concentrated positions, but from the fact that he very actively trades his portfolio. He does not "sit" on losers. One down year in the last 20, not too shabby.
 
All im pointing out is that he is very concentrated which he admits and that requires excellent timing skills which he apparently has. Nevertheless, you still risk a big blowup.
 
And given that COTS are bullish for most indices, this active gentleman would wish to get the biggest bang for the buck out of any relief rally. Same as always...trade what offers.
 
One other thing...stating we are at maximum housing distress (whatever that is supposed to imply) doesn't rule out NOT having reached maximum distress elsewhere. Nice for a soundbite though.
 
Quote from JamesVU2000:

The one thing I know for sure is Ken Heebner has about a much of clue when housing is going to bottom as a cab driver.

You can say that about anyone and anything...worthless thread.
 
Quote from Brandonf:

what kind of stats have you put up with several billioin dollars over the last few decades?

what stats did Heebner quote? he talked about ISM & population in China/India; but what did he quote?
 
Quote from Maverick74:

Ken Heebner's outperformance is not just derived from his concentrated positions, but from the fact that he very actively trades his portfolio. He does not "sit" on losers. One down year in the last 20, not too shabby.

great run... bill miller had a great run, until he didnt. Victor Neederhoffer posted great numbers, until he crashed & burned. so maybe Heebner has another 19 for 20 stretch, or maybe he regresses toward the mean.

im just another ET wannabee swinging my own line, but i disagree with Heebner.
 
Ken Heebner is a market wizard no doubt about that. He even beated Peter Lynch in terms of performance in the last decade, there was an article on Fortune about it,

Now...the fact that he is bullish about certain aspects of the economy means absolutely nothing for the 90% of all other investors, no one knows what he is doing, fact is that many traders/investors instead of buring hours in front of the screen to only have a mediocre performance would have been much better off investing with him...in terms of time and money
 
Quote from Maverick74:

Exactly, the guy was up 85% last year on 15 billion AUM. And fwiw, he was short subprime on the highs and has been long commodities all the way up. Yeah, just another schmuck. Oh yeah, and he has the 2nd best track record of any fund manager over the last 20 years. But I'm sure he would not crack the top 100 here at ET. Too many good traders on this site. :)

So? I've had plenty of trades that were fades of the positions held by great traders, and turned out to be spectacular winners. On any given trade, even the best in the world are wrong 30-40% of the time.
 
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