Joshua Byrini's Market View

Byrini's obeservations should not be considered recommendations, advice or suggestions to buy, sell or hold securities, commodities, commodity contracts, options, futures, warrants, insurance contracts, real estate, gemstones, art work or derivatives, as he is neither a registered securities, commodities or real estate broker, diamond merchant, art dealer, or investment advisor. These observations are for informational purposes only. In other words, you are on your own chief.

Sunday, March 15, 2009

 
Turns out they lied-- they were stealing the whole time.

Wednesday, January 18, 2006

 

moving money offshore to avoid the Dollar Dive....

GIM
yield's 5+%, and trades like stock (Closed End). It's also at a discount to NAV. Assets are undervalued.
good place to dodge the dollar's dive, assuming Bill Gross see something...

Monday, January 16, 2006

 

Bank Jobs-- buying Banks

CBC-- bank incubator in MI
BAC-- worth 60, trades for 47, yield 4+
NCC-- takeout target
DRL-- takeout target in PR currently in rehab, p/e is 2, smallest bank in PR
FNT-- title company, inflation works for you...
and one for the road...
OSTN.PK and OSTNO.PK -- Old Stone has a good case with the Feds, worth much more if they win or settle. The story was in Barrons:

Is that all, Archie?

MacAllaster: I have one more, a real speculation. It's a Providence, R.I., savings and loan, Old Stone, which was founded in 1819 and filed for bankruptcy in 1993. The bank took over some thrifts in the 1980s and the government allowed it to use its goodwill as capital. In 1992, the government changed its mind and forced Old Stone into bankruptcy. The bank sued and just over a year ago the federal court found in their favor for $192.5 million. The government waited for the last day it could appeal, and did.

The company has two securities outstanding -- about eight million shares of common, and one million of cumulative preferred. The preferred is $20 par and sells for about $37. But it has $34 a share in arrears on it. The case will be resolved this year or next. With the arrears, the bank would have to pay $57 million to the preferred shareholders. If they get the full $192 million, they'd be left with $140 million less lawyers' fees, leaving $80 million to $100 million for the common.

What does that sell for?

MacAllaster: The common sells for $2.90 to $3.10. You have a great chance to make money on it. Even if they settle or the court finds they're entitled to less, you will get more than your money back. On the preferred you should get it all back. But be careful. It trades thinly, about 5,000 shares a day. I would not pay more than $3.50 a share. I think you will get $8 to $10 for it.

Index Listings...
http://www.powershares.com/powermaps.asp
PBE
PBJ
PBS
PBW
PEJ
PEY
PGJ
PHO
PHW
PIV
PJP
PRF
PSI
PSJ
PTE
PWB
PWC
PWJ
PWO
PWP
PWT
PWV
PWY
PXQ
PZI

 

Getting out of the dollar, and new ideas in Indexing and ETFs

AWF-- World dollar fund
FSIIX-- Fido's overseas index
VDMIX-- Vangard's overseas index
VWO-- ETF by Vangard does emerging markets
EEM-- ETF emerging markets
EFA-- Index ETF. With EFA you're buying the EAFE [Europe, Australia, Far East] here. Japan represents 25% of total holdings; the U.K. has 22%. This is an international non-dollar-denominated index fund, which trades at a liquid price and with expenses an individual investor can afford. The average annual expense is 0.35%. It's an equity play as well as a weak-dollar play.
New concepts on Indexing
Some smart people began questioning Cap weights of indexes such as the S and P awhile ago. Then, some students with more time than money on their hands back tested and published results. Then guys with more marketing quotas than time, began doing something about it (Rydex started the fund-- RSP, now Powershares brings us indexes weighted by other measures, see below.)
RSP is an equal weighting index of the S & P. This has rocked for me after reading about it in the Journal of Finance in 2003. Bill Gross explains why people are down on Cap weighting and up on other ways of weighting indexes. This is a new trend that be profitable. Bill Gross explains it well as follows in Barrons this week:

Gross: There's a new phenomenon in the index business, introduced by Rob Arnott, who technically is associated with Pimco but basically runs his own shop. He's a brilliant asset allocator and the man behind Pimco's All-Asset Fund. Normal equity indexes such as the S&P 500 are capitalization-weighted, which means that as they go up in value, an index fund has to buy more shares of the stocks in the index. He argues, and I would agree, that in many cases stocks in the S&P, and the S&P itself, are overvalued.

Arnott created an index that isn't cap-weighted. His index and this fund are weighted by sales, income, book value and dividends. He has back-dated the concept relative to cap-weighted indexes, and its outperformance is measurable.

The index Gross is talking about is:

PRF Dec. 19th, 2005 the PowerShares FTSE RAFI U.S. 1000 Portfolio (PRF) began trading on the New York Stock Exchange. The ETF is based on a controversial new "fundamental" indexing strategy pioneered by Robert Arnott, chairman of Research Affiliates and editor of the Financial Analysts Journal.

How to protect yourself in a board market home building decline, if rate rise fast enought to choke of mortgages-- Short this!

ETFs focusing on the homebuilding sector may be late to the party. In late October, the PowerShares Dynamic Building & Construction Portfolio ETF (PKB) began trading.

If the housing market deflates in 2006 after a multi-year run and momentum investors seek other shelter, this fund could take a hit. Aside from homebuilders, the PowerShares ETF also holds stocks from related industries such as home-improvement retailers such as Home Depot Inc.(HD)and Lowe's Companies Inc.(LOW).


Tuesday, December 27, 2005

 

here is what Bill Gross can do to a Bond Fund

http://finance.yahoo.com/q/bc?s=VKA&t=5d

 

What can you say, when Gross speaks on bonds?

Barrons' reports:

PIMCO'S GROSS REMAINS a huge fan of municipal bonds. "Having been the last bond sector touched by foreign hands, it presents the last value for domestic hands," he says. In the muni market, Gross points out, closed-end funds are being "tossed away" because of tax-loss selling during this time of year. Consequently, there's value in this arena.

Funds in the Van Kampen family look attractive to Gross, as they are selling at a discount to net asset value of 10% to 15%. Van Kampen Advantage Municipal (VKA), for example, trades at a discount of more than 14% to NAV and sports a yield of 6.30%, tax-free. "That's my third-favorite of these types of funds aside from the Pimco and BlackRock closed-end funds, but those are trading at premiums," he says.


Wednesday, December 21, 2005

 

a few Chirstmas Gifts

EGLE, a dry shipping, yields a wopping yield. The company is also loved by Seth Glickenhaus, who is a 91 year old living legand on Wall Street. He offered up PGH last year for those of you who bought at 10 know what that means.
So Merry Holidays.
As for Seth's one of other picks (out of 4 picks two months ago in Barrons) , Enterra, EENC, the gas company from Canada, which was jacked and whacked by Vito Racanelli in Barron's, lets just say Josh would not make any sudden moves in light of Vito's recent observations, in spite of the ol' G's 7.5% stake in the EENC, the four letter wonder that trades 2 to 4 times the valuation its comps. Yes, it yields 10%, but at a valuation far greater than similarly situated, and with far less reserves than others. That spells yield-- the three point yellow traffic sign kind, as in proceed with caution, if not STOP and look before crossing the road.

Tuesday, December 20, 2005

 

Where to Park: A Few Floating Rate Closed Funds

PFN, Pimco's Floating Rate closedend fund is a diversified portfolio of adjustable rate securities, which make a good alternative place to park for those who need to "realize losses" at year's end. Say you were down 4 to 10 percent in VVR, or, PPR and you want to carry those losses to offset taxes next year. PFN looks like just the parking place in light of Bill Gross' recent insider buy of 33,000 shares (over 700k). PFL is a second space to place what's left over after harvesting a loss on the year in other vehicles, in which Billiam Gross placed another 500k of his own money. PFN yields 7, closer to 8%, and PFL is yielding 8, closer to 9%.
NCZ is a third, managed by the same group that manages the Pimco closed end funds listed about, where Gross placed his bets. NCZ is a Nichlaus Applegate fund of convertable securities, yielding over 9%, but with no vote of confidence by Gross.
The Pimco charts show that they have tanked a bit with other adjustable rate funds as interest rates have risen (and Greenspan was retired). Other funds that have tanked in the same way in spite of the adjustable feature include PPR and VVR. The stock prices have declined, raising the yields further, which also adjust upward inside the portfolio as interest rates rise. We think these provide something to look at with yields crossing 8 percent in most cases.
Gross overseas PIMCO, an asset manager with one of the largest Bond portfolios in the world.

Tuesday, December 06, 2005

 

Emerging Markets...

Responding to the buzz about emerging markets, I found these lower risk ways to play the growth in emerging markets in the absence of growth here in developed countries.
Emerging
VWO-- no div., but wide exposure to top names in Emerging markups.
EEM-- pays a div., not much but it has a track record too.
GECDX-- mutual fund, low fees, top ranking on Morningstar,
GMDRX-- same as above
GMCDX-- same as above

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