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Ignore the market until February, says expert

Posted Nov 20 2008, 01:32 PM by Kim Peterson
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Great investors listen to the market, but what in the world is the market telling us these days? Don't even try to understand -- there are too many factors skewing any market message. Just ignore the market until Feburary, writes former hedge fund manager Andy Kessler in the WSJ.

When the market is at its most efficient, buyers and sellers neatly match up at the best price, Kessler writes. But the credit crunch has made the market as inefficient as it gets. Here's Kessler's list of the five biggest dislocations hitting the market now:

1. Taxes. People will soon start selling stocks for the tax loss. "December can be an ugly month of indiscriminate selling," Kessler writes. "The December effect will be huge this year."

2. Mutual fund redemptions. Look at Fidelity's Magellan Fund, down 56% for the year. Investors are dumping mutual funds for tax losses, Kessler writes, which forces the funds to unload shares to raise cash.

3. Mutual fund distributions. December is the month when mutual funds distribute capital gains. As those funds are forced to sell, they could trigger big capital gains.

4. Hedge-fund redemptions. Hedge funds have been furiously selling since September to pay off investors.

5. Margin calls. People have made some huge margin calls lately to cover share losses, and those calls usually take place in the last 30 minutes of trading. "You can bet many not-so-public margin calls are behind many huge price drops," Kessler writes.

So why ignore the market in January? Mainly because underperforming portfolio managers are fired at the end of the year, Kessler writes. Their replacements arrive in January, dump everything and start from scratch. That could lead to another month of instability.

Comments

 

As with any serious upheaval (money, job, health), living through it can be really scary.  I guess one answer is: living and working through it.  Whatever that means and whatever it takes to come out the other side.  It's not fun but neither is operating on yourself.  

Its a 'C' minus society.  I am glad there are people out there who are panicking and selling out of their retirement plans. Lets weed out the pretenders and the Mr. No Load so called professionals / Suzie Orman types so we can move forward. People like this allow people like me to get ahead.

The world is not coming to an end...

FIRE MILLEN! (Still feel the need to say that) Go RED WINGS!

Maybe we havent even seen the tip of the iceberg yet!!  

I needed a good lauagh. Thanks Mrs. Butterworth

AEROSMITH ROCKS

We all played, we all benefitted, we all knew it was unsustainable...now we all want to blame someone else. I just have a 401k and a few $'s in funds...but 12% year over year wasn't raising ant complaints from me. We all own this mess.

What we are expereincing is Years of non regulations and encouraged excess that people could not afford.  It was bound to happen, definatley painful, but his too shall pass.  Selling is the worse thing anyone can do, because it crystallises losses.  We are going through a painful transition and the way America and the rest of the world does business will.  Not necessarily bad.  

A certain amount of the problem is uncertainty about the president elect's to-be policies.  There is a good deal of concern about increasing taxes, etc.  

Things didn't start going to hell in a hand basket until the Dems took control of congress 2 years ago.  It has only accelerated since we know th Dems will have control of it all in two months.

Let's see the look on "their" faces when they realize that there are no revenues to tax....

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