RF's Financial News

RF's Financial News

Sunday, November 12, 2023

This Week in Barrons: November 12th, 2023


‘Come On Man… Do the Right Thing’  With SBF’s guilty verdict behind us, it’s time to talk about the challenges associated with behaving ethically (aka ‘Doing the Right Thing’).  Ethics is virtually never emphasized as part of a business school curriculum.    After all:

-       Unethical behavior and inefficient markets were also responsible for the metals and currency price fixing at major banks like: JPM, Citi, and Barclays.

-       A lack of ethics and inefficient OTC desks caused Silicon Valley Bank, Schwab, and First Republic to be caught upside down inside of the yield curve trade.

-       And a lack of a moral compass allowed real estate commission collusion to go on far too long.

Everyone needs to understand the importance and value of ethical behavior.  We can’t continue to idolize those who refuse to understand the foundational aspects of: Doing the Right Thing!


Perseverance:  Life is often an exercise in perseverance.  Time and time again, it seems like we wait forever, and just before we’re about to leave – the magical transformation occurs. Without knowing that this is how things work, it’s unlikely that most of us would even make it half-way through one of these events.  Simply knowing how it’s done – makes it far more likely that we will stick it out and actually do it again.


‘I remember when…’  When the internet was young, the major book publishers had everything they needed to create a dominant search engine.  After all, they were the grand organizers of the world’s information.  Except for the fact – that they didn’t even consider it.  That was because they believed that their job was to sell books to bookstores.  Per Seth G: This false vision / belief is more urgent for individuals.  What you were trained to do, and What you are doing – is all in the past.  When someone asks you: “What do you do?”  Try responding with: “What I did yesterday was…”   It’s a great way to open the door to envisioning what you could be doing tomorrow.



The Market:


Per Anthony P: CLICK HERE to experience a prototype of an AI-generated sports narration that was created by simply feeding the AI-engine a video file and prompting it to narrate what was happening.  [https://twitter.com/geepytee/status/1721705524176257296?s=20 ].  A couple thoughts after playing this a half-dozen times:

-       (1) It’s becoming obvious that AI products are going to replace humans in a variety of white-collar jobs.  I don’t know that very many sports announcers were worried about their jobs before seeing this.  

-       (2) This is Version 1.0 of a product that uses sports narration as its proof-of-concept.  And yes, this version will not replace the human announcer, but give it 2 to 3 years, and I’m betting the result will be indistinguishable from a human.  In many ways, we are all becoming technology investors.  Some of us are using our capital, while others our time and effort.  

-       (3) Now is the time to: acquire new skills, build relevant levels of expertise, and position yourself to benefit (rather than suffer) from the coming changes.  You can certainly try and delay it happening, but you’ll never avoid it.  



InfoBits:


-       Berkshire Hathaway reported a…  41% jump in YoY Q3 operating earnings, and is sitting on $157B in cash.


-       Mortgage rates are AVERAGE (historically), but demand is down:

o   50% from pre-pandemic levels, 

o   At its lowest level in 30 years,

o   And is down ~75% from its 2005 all-time-high.


-       One of the biggest global shipping giants is cutting 10,000 jobs…  due to a global trade slowdown.


-       Over 26 trucking companies have declared bankruptcy YTD…  putting tens of thousands of truck drivers out of work.


-       How about our poor ‘student athletes’:  

o   USC basketball’s Bronny James earns an NCAA-topping ~$6m/year in NIL (Name, Image, and Likeness) revenues. 

o   Colorado University’s QB Shedeur Sanders leads college football with $4.3m/year in NIL revs. 

o   And LSU gymnast Livvy Dunne will make $3.2m doing commercials for American Eagle and Vuori.


-       FedEx Express is encouraging cargo pilots…   to take other jobs at regional passenger carriers for the holidays – due to the lack of shipping demand.


-       The WSJ reported: “The U.S. and its NATO allies are serving notice that they are formally suspending their participation in a 1990 treaty limiting conventional forces in Europe.”


-       Amazon will offer its Prime members…  low-cost memberships to its boutique One Medical primary care business.  It truly sees a future in healthcare.


-       The latest in wearable tech is…  a Star-Trek’esque pin made by Humane.  The Ai Pin (a smartphone replacement) is screen less and controlled by voice commands.


-       Eli Lilly received FDA approval for its own weight-loss drug…  Zepbound.  Lilly said that it will cost 21% less than rivals Wegovy and Ozempic.


-       Following a Cruise-powered robotaxi collision…  that dragged a pedestrian beneath the car – the CEO of Cruise announced: “Layoffs are coming.”


-       Moody’s cuts USA’s outlook to negative…  as the ratings agency pointed to the rising risks of our nation’s fiscal strength.


-       UAW workers at one GM plan narrowly vote against the labor deal…  hoping that other shops will press their leverage and hold out for a better deal.



Crypto-Bytes:


-       Stablecoin issuer Circle Internet is considering going public – again...  as last year, it tried and failed to go public via SPAC.


-       MicroStrategy's (MSTR) stock price has soared 250% this year…  thanks in large part to the billions it holds in Bitcoin.


-       Bitcoin hit an 18-month high…  and Ethereum climbed above $2k for the first time since April.  The world’s anticipation of our SEC approving a spot bitcoin ETF is the catalyst for the move.


-       The total crypto market cap just exceeded $1.3T…  for the first time in 18 months. This means that there is more crypto than silver in the world.


-       Bitcoin just exceeded their $31k resistance level…  making ‘resistance’ the new ‘support’.  It makes the path of least resistance = higher – much higher.


-       When will Bitcoin reach $100,000?  Probably soon, but how much more after that – $200,000 or $1m?  What I know is that the risk vs reward is very much in favor of the bulls.  As long as BTC is over $31k, the amount of risk someone is taking by NOT being long – is too large to calculate.



TW3 (That Was - The Week - That Was):


Monday:  Stocks rose Friday after a soft jobs report drove bond yields lower as the S&P jumped 5.85% WoW, the Dow climbed 5.07%, the Nasdaq gained 6.61% and the Russell surged 7.56%.  The Volatility Index (VIX) tumbled ~30% on the week, and the US dollar is down at a 7-week low.


Wednesday:  Treasury yields declined as markets remained confident that no more interest rate increases are coming this year.  Oil prices dropped to their lowest level in 3.5 months as global economic data is pointing toward a potential slowdown in energy demand.  Yesterday the S&P tried several times to break-over 4385 but couldn't do it.  This market is not running on logic, but rather on the 10-Year interest rate.  If the 10-Year falls below 4.5%, the techs are going to scream higher.


Thursday. There’s a lot of resistance right here, as this market is being held up by the Magnificent-7.  The results of the 30-year bond auction hit were ugly.  None of the foreign bidders showed up, and our own dealers refused to buy into the ‘eat where you poop’ philosophy.  Even worse, Powell’s remarks today were quite hawkish.  He said we're a LONG way from target inflation, and rates may have to rise more if growth continues at this pace.  Up went the 10-Year and the Dollar, and down went the S&Ps.


Friday:  Put CCJ on your radar as an example of a cup and handle pattern.  When the handle breaks over the lip of the cup, it's often a very good buy signal.  We'd want to see it get over $42.85 before seriously considering it.  For anyone that likes to play the really little names, watch KOPN over $1.36.  We're in a period where they want this market higher, and nothing is going to get in their way.  Remember, markets can remain insane longer than you can stay solvent.



AMA (Ask Me Anything…)


What about WeWork?  Often people think of SoftBank as an unfortunate passenger on the WeWork train wreck.  You know, the one that turned a $49B valuation into last week’s latest bankruptcy.  In my opinion, one of the real tragedies of WeWork was that the VCs (mainly SoftBank) made their business model worse instead of better.  WeWork’s failures (despite needing better commercial real estate options) included mirroring their needs and growth strategy to that of SoftBank.  After all (per Anthony P.), the VCs were writing the big checks, so they got to make the big decisions – including when, why, and how to go public.  It’s interesting that a number of co-working’esque businesses have survived and are still growing – admittedly without the massive VC and growth expectations once associated with WeWork.  SoftBank’s value destruction at WeWork goes deeper than its own more than $14B cumulative loss, missed lease payments, and evaporated equity for WeWork employees.  SoftBank actually destroyed something that could have worked under better stewardship.  Going forward, has WeWork's demise permanently ruined SoftBank CEO Masayoshi Son’s reputation as an investor?  Prof. Damodaran at the Stern School of Business said: “You can recover from mistakes, but not from the perception that you don’t know what you’re doing.” 



Next Week:  It’s High-Stakes Gambling…


Some Notes:

-       Sentiment shifted and it became a risk-on environment.

-       But it came after a shakeout in positioning.

-       Assets are trading as if the Fed is finished hiking rates.

-       Borrowing costs remain trending higher for listed companies.

-       The yield curves act as a reminder of the importance of risk management.


Correlation kicked in and markets flew…  This week markets suddenly became correlatedto the upside, and when that happens (Friday) you will cause large, over-sized moves.  


Watch the NASDAQ Expected Move…  because when it comes down to it – it’s all about Big Tech.  But when you put everything in perspective using Expected Moves (EM), you find that the Nasdaq (QQQ) was destroyed with outside EMs lower in October and applauded with outside EMs higher in November.  At this point the Nasdaq is getting ripped apart at the seams – it’s an ‘out-of-control’ marketplace.  Tip #1: Never trust a market that is behaving in an unruly fashion.  Get ready for some wild-n-wooly reversals coming out of the QQQ’s.    


Our FED speaks and markets do NOT listen…  J. Powell was incredibly hawkish in his remarks last Thursday, and the markets promptly forgot everything he said by Friday morning.


Bond market auctions DO matter…  Thursday, the US Gov’t tried to borrow $24B by selling a bunch of 30-year debt.  It was a huge disaster, and in order to get enough people to buy, the rate had to dramatically increase.  Even then, the primary dealers (the buyers of last resort) had to buy 25% of the debt.  

-       China, Japan, Saudi Arabia, and Russia are no longer buying our debt.  In fact, most are selling what they already have.  

-       With fewer buyers and us needing to borrow more than ever ($1.5T in the past 4 months and another $1.5T in the next 6) we will need to offer higher rates to attract lenders.

-       Tip #2: Am I to assume that China’s Premier Xi’s visit next week with Pres. Biden in San Francisco is purely a routine discussion?  Please, simply follow the bonds.


Major Economic Data week…  Starting on Tuesday with the CPI Report, Retail sales and Manufacturing – next week gives us many, market-moving news events.   


SPX Expected Move:

-       Last Week = $62 … and we basically moved +$62 to the upside. 

-       Next Week = $64 … Tip #3: Fair Warning: Volatility is NOT collapsing in an upwardly moving market.  



TIPS:


A salute to any and all of you who have worn the uniform in any capacity.


HODL’s: (Hold On for Dear Life)

-       PHYSICAL COMMODITIES = Gold @ $1941/oz. & Silver @ $22.3/oz.

-       13-Week Treasuries @ 5.4%

-       **Bitcoin (BTC = $37,600 / in at $4,310)

-       **Ethereum (ETH = $2,100 / in at $310)

-       **ChainLink (LINK = $16.20 / in at $7.78)

-       CCJ – Uranium = ($42.5 / in at $33.8)

-       NFGC – Newfound Gold ($3.6 / in at $3.8)

-       UEC – Uranium Energy Corp ($5.6 / in at $4.8)


Follow me on StockTwits.com to get my daily thoughts and trades – my handle is: taylorpamm.


Please be safe out there!


Disclaimer:

Expressed thoughts proffered within the BARRONS REPORT, a Private and free weekly economic newsletter, are those of noted entrepreneur, professor and author, R.F. Culbertson, contributing sources and those he interviews.  You can learn more and get your subscription by visiting: <http://rfcfinancialnews.blogspot.com/>. 

 

Please write to Mr. Culbertson at: <rfc@culbertsons.com> to inform him of any reproductions, including when and where copy will be reproduced. You may use in complete form or, if quoting in brief, reference <http://rfcfinancialnews.blogspot.com/>.

 

If you'd like to view R.F.'s actual stock trades - and see more of his thoughts - please feel free to sign up as a StockTwits follower -  "taylorpamm" is the handle.

 

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Sunday, November 5, 2023

This Week in Barrons: November 5th, 2023

Innovation:

-       Will never be embraced by everyone, and IF you require unanimous consent – you will never move forward.

-       Will never be convenient, and IF it were – someone would have done it before you.

-       May not work, and hopefully everyone is ok with failure.

Therefore, if your project needs any of the above to move forward, you probably need to choose a different project.


When Defending the Status Quo:

-       Try denying the problem, minimizing it, making up data, distracting from the conversation, making people feel like hypocrites, and emphasizing the convenient elements of what is already in place.

-       Try acknowledging the problem, but also pointing out that it’s far too late to do anything about it.

Per Seth G: Both defenses work and happen constantly.  But neither defense is true, helpful, or generous.



The Market:


What a week Tim Cook (CEO of Apple) had…  On Thursday, Apple reported anemic Q3 results, completing a fiscal year where revenues fell 2.8%.  That’s actually not a bad result given the smartphone market shrank 10.5% in the same time period.  Still, it’s yet another reminder that Apple is no longer a growth company.  Tim’s other big event this past week was his sixty-third birthday – which puts him at least a decade older (and wiser) than his respective tech counterparts.  Happy Birthday Tim Cook!



InfoBits:


-       Big Oil went on a buying spree…  betting that a green future is a distant future.


-       Charlie Munger has never liked VCs…  “If you want to make money by screwing your investors, then being a VC is for you.”


-       The average yearly VC returns…  over the past 20 years is 11.8%, versus 12% for the Nasdaq.


-       Twitter’s valuation is down ~57%...  since Elon purchased it.  


-       WeWork will declare bankruptcy next week.  In 2019 it was valued by SoftBank at $47B – before it lost its mojo.


-       Anheuser-Busch’s (Budweiser’s) U.S. revenue…  fell 13.5% YoY.


-       A Rodin sculpture worth $3.6m went missing…  from a Glasgow museum.  It was last seen 74 years ago, and is one of ~1,800 other missing pieces from the city’s museums.


-       McDonald’s and Chipotle will raise worker wages in CA to $20/hr…   and pass the entire wage-increase directly on to their customers.


-       UAW work stoppages cost Big-Auto…  GM = $800m, Ford = $1.3B, and Jeep maker Stellantis = $3.2B.


-       Six Flags and Cedar Fair will merge in an $8B deal.  The merger will put 27 amusement parks, 15 water parks, and 9 resorts across Canada, the US, and Mexico under one stock ticker.


-       It’s Pharmageddon for CVS, Walgreens, and Rite Aid…   as they plan to close 1.5K stores.  Many continue to turn to mail-order services like Express Scripts, Amazon Pharmacy, and Cost-Plus Drugs – fueling even more brick-n-mortar closures.


-       Labor market cools…  as October’s nonfarm payrolls increased by 150,000 jobs.  The unemployment rate rose to 3.9% - the highest level since Jan. 2022. 



Crypto-Bytes:


-       At his own trial, SBF’s response to the facts was…  “I don’t know” or “I don’t recall” over 150 times.


-       SBF was found guilty on seven counts of fraud...  as the jury only needed 4 hours to deliberate – which means they knew within a few minutes and then ordered lunch.


-       SBF’s sentencing is scheduled for March 28th  and he is expected to get 20 to 30 years in prison – although it could go up to 105 years.


-       Bitcoin saw a “golden cross” last week…  which some traders interpret as bullish.  Bitcoin’s price has more than doubled this year, and analysts point to the ETF excitement being the latest catalyst – along with the impending debt crisis.


-       Coinbase reported its seventh straight quarterly loss…  however, its stablecoin partnership (USDC) with Circle saw profitability as interest rates rose.


-       Per Jurrien Trimmer (Director of Global Macro at Fidelity)…  “Bitcoin’s current price rise is in-line with past bull markets.  Bitcoin is a commodity currency that aspires to be a store of value and a hedge against monetary debasement.  I think of it as exponential gold.”  Exponential Gold == the downside protection of gold + the upside advantage of tech stocks.


-       Per Balaji Srinivasan…  “By 2040 everyone under the age of 30 will have grown up in a world where bitcoin has always existed.  There will be no difference between bitcoin and gold as both have been around forever in their eyes.”



TW3 (That Was - The Week - That Was):


Monday:  Our FED’s preferred measure of underlying inflation accelerated in September to a four-month high – all the while consumer spending increased, and October’s near-term inflation expectations rose to a five-month high.  The data comes ahead of the FOMC interest rate policy decision mid-week though no changes are expected.  Currently, over two-thirds of the S&P stocks are trading below their 200-day moving averages, and the 10-Year has climbed back to 4.93%.  Watch Raytheon (RTX) as a move over $80 would pull me in.


Tuesday:  Wow.  After sliding sideways and down for 3 months, I can only assume that ‘the collective’ decided that on Monday we should take back 500 DOW points.  Was there any news driving that, maybe peace in the Middle East?  Nope.  I’m confused.


Wednesday:   I continue to like uranium (UEC) and would buy more over $6.04, but currently we’re waiting on Powell.  The only real question is: ‘How hawkish/dovish is he going to be?’  A few excerpts that I gathered from Powell’s press conference:

-       "Strongly committed" to achieving 2% inflation. 

-       The full effects of tightening have yet to be felt. 

-       Nominal wage growth is showing “some signs” of easing.

-       The labor market remains stronger than expected.

-       The FED will “proceed carefully” on upcoming policy.

-       Reducing inflation will likely require a weaker labor market.

-       And, “We are not talking cuts or even thinking about them at this point.”


Friday:  Heading into Friday, major averages are on track for their best weekly performance in nearly a year.  The S&Ps are up 4.87% week-to-date, Nasdaq +5.15% WTD, the Dow +4.38%, and the Russell +4.72%.  Per @jasongoepfert: “This is the 24th time the Russell closed at a 52-week low, then surged to its best 4-day rally in at least 3 months. A year later, the small-cap index was higher 100% of the time with a median return of +25.6%.”  Gaining 1,512 DOW points in four sessions is not normal.  Our FED jumped into the debt market, bought bonds, and got the 10-Year to drop like a rock. Instantly the market thought that corporations can now roll over their debts at a lesser rate, and borrow their way to glory.  That instantly pushed the 10-Year yield down to 4.57 and the futures spiked higher.



AMA (Ask Me Anything…)


Should I be investing more in bitcoin?  As US Treasuries continue to fall in value – bitcoin continues to rise.  Investors appear to be treating bitcoin as a safe haven – as they dump bonds to buy bitcoin.  Since the start of Russia v. Ukraine – bitcoin has gained ~50%.  Since the beginning of Hamas v. Israel – bitcoin is up ~24%.  The entire crypto market is up ~67% YTD, and ~33% YoY.  As bonds move lower, bitcoin has been appreciating because professional investors are viewing bitcoin as the ultimate safe haven asset.  After all, bitcoin provides clarity and predictability regardless of what is happening in the world.  Peace or war, loose or tight monetary policy – bitcoin will continue to produce 900 bitcoin per day until the next halving.  This level of predictability is foreign to financial markets because their legacy systems have become a reactive cesspool of guessing and human error.  Currently large financial institutions, pensions, endowments, and foundations – all hold trillions of dollars in bonds.  If that capital was to flow in a different direction, it would be catastrophic for the U.S. and an asset like bitcoin would have to re-price at substantially higher levels.  Financial assets have traditionally benefited or suffered due to confidence.  Currently, capital flows suggest investors are decreasing their trust in Treasuries and increasing their trust in bitcoin.  If this phenomenon continues, it will mark one of the most significant changes to financial markets in decades.  Yes, you should increase your allocation to BTC.



Next Week:  Do they think we’re stupid?


When you look at the above chart you notice 2 things:

1.   The best forecasters in the world – have gotten it ‘dead wrong’ for 8 out of the last 13 weeks.  That’s a horrible average and begs the question: ‘Manipulation’?

2.   We moved +1,750 DOW points last week – on what news?  Is there peace in the Ukraine, or did we cure cancer?  No, to both.  Again: ‘Manipulation’?


#1 = The Jobs Report…. Per Bob R: Financial news commentators told us that in October we created 150k new jobs.  Unfortunately, the BLS’s Birth/Death model had injected 412,000 fake jobs into that number.  So, in reality we lost 262,000 jobs in October (removing 412k from the +150k) – but that’s not all.  The BLS data also showed that we lost all of the 348,000 phantom jobs that they created in September.  So, we’re in a recession, it's getting deeper, and we’re not allowed to know it.


#2 = Last Week’s Action…  The yield on the 10-Year Treasury is the ‘benchmark’ off which many things are based.  In mid-October, the 10-Year had gotten to 5%, and you could hear things breaking in the debt market.  Contracts were being cancelled, defaults were soaring, and repos were off-the-charts.  So, last Monday we had a treasury with no money, an upcoming government shut-down, and a bond market on the edge of a full-blown credit meltdown.  So, Ms. Yellen did what any ‘drunken sailor’ would do: she conjured up an enormous bond offering, printed money, and bought it all herself – driving the 10-Year yield back down to 4.5%.  And guess what – it worked: it drove the stock market bat-crap crazy.  CNBC’s Steve Liesmann remarked: "The bond market is moving like a penny stock".  Unfortunately Janet, that’s not a sustainable model.


#3 = The Santa Rally…  Each year we tend to get a seasonal year-end rally that some call the Santa rally.  Simply looking at this past week, we gained over 1750 DOW points.  And while the DOW is the most widely watched index in the world, it's only 30 stocks – the real focus is the S&P.  

-       In July, the S&P topped at 4607, and slid to 4325 in August.

-       It bounced higher to 4515, and then plunged to 4430.

-       Then it rallied to 4511, before falling to 4220.

-       Finally, it moved back to 4380, before bottoming at 4103.  


What you saw was a series of lower lows and lower highs, and currently the market is in wicked-bounce mode.  The S&Ps are currently around 4380:

-       If the S&Ps roll back over, we're probably going to see 4230 again, and if that doesn't hold – we’ll be back to testing 4100. 

-       If the S&Ps take a shallow pause at the 4380 level and then push through that – we could be looking at a run to 4500.



TIPS:


HODL’s: (Hold On for Dear Life)

-       PHYSICAL COMMODITIES = Gold @ $2000/oz. & Silver @ $23.3/oz.

-       13-Week Treasuries @ 5.45%

-       **Bitcoin (BTC = $34,750 / in at $4,310)

-       **Ethereum (ETH = $1,830 / in at $310)

-       Apple (AAPL = $177 / in at $177)

-       BITO (Bitcoin Strategy ETF = $17.40 / in at $17.22)

-       CCJ – Uranium = ($42 / in at $33.8)

-       DO – Diamond Offshore ($13.4 / in at $15)

-       NFGC – Newfound Gold ($3.8 / in at $3.8)

o   SOLD Jan. $5.00 CALLS

-       UEC – Uranium Energy Corp ($5.8 / in at $4.8)


Follow me on StockTwits.com to get my daily thoughts and trades – my handle is: taylorpamm.


Please be safe out there!


Disclaimer:

Expressed thoughts proffered within the BARRONS REPORT, a Private and free weekly economic newsletter, are those of noted entrepreneur, professor and author, R.F. Culbertson, contributing sources and those he interviews.  You can learn more and get your subscription by visiting: <http://rfcfinancialnews.blogspot.com/>. 

 

Please write to Mr. Culbertson at: <rfc@culbertsons.com> to inform him of any reproductions, including when and where copy will be reproduced. You may use in complete form or, if quoting in brief, reference <http://rfcfinancialnews.blogspot.com/>.

 

If you'd like to view R.F.'s actual stock trades - and see more of his thoughts - please feel free to sign up as a StockTwits follower -  "taylorpamm" is the handle.

 

If you'd like to see R.F. in action - teaching people about investing - please feel free to view the TED talk that he gave on Fearless Investing: 

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Creativity = https://youtu.be/n2QiPSe_dKk   

Investing = https://youtu.be/zIIlk6DlSOM

Marketing = https://youtu.be/p0wWGdOfYXI

Sales = https://youtu.be/blKw0zb6SZk

Startup Incinerator = https://youtu.be/ieR6vzCFldI

 

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Views expressed are provided for information purposes only and should not be construed in any way as an offer, an endorsement, or inducement to invest and is not in any way a testimony of, or associated with Mr. Culbertson's other firms or associations.  Mr. Culbertson and related parties are not registered and licensed brokers.  This message may contain information that is confidential or privileged and is intended only for the individual or entity named above and does not constitute an offer for or advice about any alternative investment product. Such advice can only be made when accompanied by a prospectus or similar offering document.  Please make sure to review important disclosures at the end of each article.

 

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PAST RESULTS ARE NOT INDICATIVE OF FUTURE RESULTS. THERE IS RISK OF LOSS AS WELL AS THE OPPORTUNITY FOR GAIN WHEN INVESTING. WHEN CONSIDERING ALTERNATIVE INVESTMENTS (INCLUDING HEDGE FUNDS) AN INVESTOR SHOULD CONSIDER VARIOUS RISKS INCLUDING THE FACT THAT SOME PRODUCTS AND OTHER SPECULATIVE INVESTMENT PRACTICES MAY INCREASE RISK OF INVESTMENT LOSS; MAY NOT BE SUBJECT TO THE SAME REGULATORY REQUIREMENTS AS MUTUAL FUNDS, OFTEN CHARGE HIGH FEES, AND IN MANY CASES THE UNDERLYING INVESTMENTS ARE NOT TRANSPARENT AND ARE KNOWN ONLY TO THE INVESTMENT MANAGER.

 

Alternative investment performance can be volatile. An investor could lose all or a substantial amount of his or her investment. Often, alternative investment fund and account managers have total trading authority over their funds or accounts; the use of a single advisor applying generally similar trading programs could mean lack of diversification and, consequently, higher risk. There is often no secondary market for an investor's interest in alternative investments, and none is expected to develop.

 

All material presented herein is believed to be reliable but we cannot attest to its accuracy. Opinions expressed in these reports may change without prior notice. Culbertson and/or the staff may or may not have investments in any funds cited above.

 

Remember the Blog: <http://rfcfinancialnews.blogspot.com/> 
Until next week – be safe.


R.F. Culbertson

<mailto:rfc@culbertsons.com>

<http://rfcfinancialnews.blogspot.com>