Archive for January, 2009

End Of An Era: I’m Cast Out Of The M10

Wednesday, 14th January, 2009

After a 45- or so month run, I have finally been taken off of Marketocracy’s Top Ten list. (Although I still remain in their Top 100 out of some 50,000-80,000 “fantasy funds” monitored there).

Anyone following my stock picks here has had to have been aware of what a beating we all took through 2008 (although I did beat the market–as measured by the S&P500–by 5 percentage points over the last 12 months).

I’ll continue to post stock picks here (and I had intended to post some today, but I can’t see my computer monitor well enough through the tears)–but you’ll just want to pay less attention to them…

Good luck!

Michael Lewis On Bernie Madoff, Etc.

Tuesday, 6th January, 2009

Here’s a Sunday Op Ed from the NY TIMES by Michael Lewis (LIAR’S POKER, MONEYBALL) and David Einhorn. Well worth the somewhat lengthy read:

AMERICANS enter the New Year in a strange new role: financial lunatics. We’ve been viewed by the wider world with mistrust and suspicion on other matters, but on the subject of money even our harshest critics have been inclined to believe that we knew what we were doing. They watched our investment bankers and emulated them: for a long time now half the planet’s college graduates seemed to want nothing more out of life than a job on Wall Street.
This is one reason the collapse of our financial system has inspired not merely a national but a global crisis of confidence. Good God, the world seems to be saying, if they don’t know what they are doing with money, who does?

Incredibly, intelligent people the world over remain willing to lend us money and even listen to our advice; they appear not to have realized the full extent of our madness. We have at least a brief chance to cure ourselves. But first we need to ask: of what?

To that end consider the strange story of Harry Markopolos. Mr. Markopolos is the former investment officer with Rampart Investment Management in Boston who, for nine years, tried to explain to the Securities and Exchange Commission that Bernard L. Madoff couldn’t be anything other than a fraud. Mr. Madoff’s investment performance, given his stated strategy, was not merely improbable but mathematically impossible. And so, Mr. Markopolos reasoned, Bernard Madoff must be doing something other than what he said he was doing.

In his devastatingly persuasive 17-page letter to the S.E.C., Mr. Markopolos saw two possible scenarios. In the “Unlikely” scenario: Mr. Madoff, who acted as a broker as well as an investor, was “front-running” his brokerage customers. A customer might submit an order to Madoff Securities to buy shares in I.B.M. at a certain price, for example, and Madoff Securities instantly would buy I.B.M. shares for its own portfolio ahead of the customer order. If I.B.M.’s shares rose, Mr. Madoff kept them; if they fell he fobbed them off onto the poor customer.

In the “Highly Likely” scenario, wrote Mr. Markopolos, “Madoff Securities is the world’s largest Ponzi Scheme.” Which, as we now know, it was.

Harry Markopolos sent his report to the S.E.C. on Nov. 7, 2005 — more than three years before Mr. Madoff was finally exposed — but he had been trying to explain the fraud to them since 1999….[Rest of article]


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