Welcomed Back

It had been a full 14 months, give or take a few days, since I had published an article on Seeking Alpha.

Seeking Alpha was the vehicle that helped me get the old “Option to Profit” to go beyond just a handful of paying subscribers when it first got off the ground and I was looking for something to do with myself that wouldn’t result in the growth of hair on the palmar surface of my hands.

I had never really wanted to have a volume of subscribers, especially since I was sending real time text message and email alerts at the time and the model included lots of real time text message communication and hand holding with subscribers.

Pricing the service at $200/month was a good way to keep subscriber numbers down, as was the poor quality of the offering and amateurish website.

I don’t even recall who had told me about Seeking Alpha, as I never really prowled around looking to write anywhere other than on my own space and I certainly wasn’t interested in reading anything, especially if they were being written by “posers” like me. Continue reading “Welcomed Back”

Visits: 11

Come On Volatility

I’ve always been fascinated by the concept of “volatility.”

When I say “always,” I don’t really mean “always,” but for at least the past decade or maybe a bit more.

Volatility is one of these things that is really hard to comprehend, even though it really shouldn’t be, even as it is applied to stocks and stock markets.

Volatility is nothing more than what is defined by an equation.

Even if that equation may be a complicated one, there is something that should be comforting about the certainty of it and its calculation. There is no art to it.

It is all about science.

Subjectivity versus objectivity.

Emotion versus cold, hard facts.

Volatility is simply the result of an equation that measures “variance,” which as everyone who has taken an elementary course in statistics or bio-statistics knows as being itself related to the more commonly recognized expression: Standard Deviation.

Who am I kidding? No one recognizes that expression, or if they do, it’s been misinterpreted when I’ve used it sitting at an out of town bar, trying to strike up casual conversation with someone far younger and far more attractive than me.

Anyway, there is lots of confusion over what volatility represents and I’m confused by it, as well, even as I think that I understand it.

The confusion really enters once a marketplace for volatility had come into being.

The equation, which should be primary, is now more of a junior consultant.

Continue reading at Seeking Alpha

 

 

 

Visits: 16

A New Someday Began Today

Image result for whewWhew.

What a week.

There are lots of statistics and factoids being tossed around this week.

Every one of them is pretty fascinating and each one lasts in the apses of my mind for about a second.

None of them are very important and none of them are worth remembering, because there is very little in life that isn’t transient.

Just when you think yu’ve seen the depths comes something lower and just when you think you have found paradise, somes a realization that it can then never get better.

But it does,

So the very old phrase “This too, shall pass,” has lots of meaning. Continue reading “A New Someday Began Today”

Visits: 18

It Could Have Been Worse

Perspective means so much.

On days like today things could have been much worse.

For me, as an option seller, it is always a case of balancing the fear of missing out (“FOMO”) with the need to have protection.

Sort of like balancing out missing the joys of fatherhood with fatherhood.

As long as we’re talking about me, my decisions are usually predicated on what I perceive as a simple mathematical truism.

I’d rather miss out on a 10% gain than have to gain 11% to make up for a 10% loss.

That may not really answer the question, but in the longer term, even as my perspective on what constitutes “long term” changes, I would rather miss out on some gains than have a deeper hole than a care to dig out from.

But also knowing that in the longer term the market goes higher, it typically is a question of just keeping your capital and your wits. Continue reading “It Could Have Been Worse”

Visits: 15

Cash

About 5 or 6 years ago, I wrote an article called “What Would Cash Do?

The photo to the left is the one time that the Seeking Alpha editors didn’t let me get my way.

I was reminded about it the other day when someone asked a question on a closed Facebook page about what artist do you hear and then remember what a badass he was?

For me, the answer was easy.

It was Johnny Cash.

But it also reminded me of what I’m up to right now in preparation for things to come. Continue reading “Cash”

Visits: 13

LEAPS?

Why LEAPS?

After more than a decade of getting a serious level of excitement by simply making a trade, even if the net profit per share was a penny or two, I always knew that someday I wouldn’t be able to sustain the kind of maintenance that it took to keep on an eye on a portfolio.

Even worse, I knew that someday I wouldn’t have the kind of time and attention that it took to keep an eye on multiple portfolios, especially when those portfolios may have had different goals and tolerances for risk.

Like most people, I always looked at investing and investment philosophy as being on a continuum. Continue reading “LEAPS?”

Visits: 148

Happy One Year Anniversary to Me

Well, the One Year Anniversary of the newest iteration of TheAcsMan is coming up soon tomorrow.

For the very, very few that have been following along ever since 2007 or so with Szelhamos.com and then the original TheAcsMan.com, you may recall that both shuttered on the one year anniversary date.

OptionToProfit.com went on for 5 years, but this time around, it’s time to revert to old ways again and TheAcsMan comes to its end in a few weeks tomorrow upon the occasion of its first anniversary.

But, in the works is LEAPToProfit.com which reflects where I always knew I would be eventually headed with my investing habits.

That means less trades, even less writing than I do now. Continue reading “Happy One Year Anniversary to Me”

Visits: 16

LEAP to Profit

It’s time to move onto the next phase of my investing life.

If you are a retiree, that doesn’t mean following the old conventional wisdom and moving into fixed income asset bonds.

Perish the thought.

It’s time to “LEAP to Profit.”

Visits: 332

Howard Marks in Saudi Arabia

The really nice thing about money and its pursuit is that even inveterate enemies can turn their nuclear tipped projectiles into rose petals at the feet of their otherwise erstwhile adversary.

This morning I was reminded of that incongruous scene a number of years ago when Sandy Weill, the ex-Chairman and CEO of Citigroup was secretly and then not so secretly in the middle of the desert, in Saudi Arabia, with camels in the background, meeting with Prince Al-Waleed.

Now, in Saudi Arabia, everyone is a prince, but Al-Waleed is a Prince among Princes and known for his investing acumen.

That acumen has often gone against the conventional wisdom.

At the time, Citigroup was in tremendous crisis, along with the rest of the financial sector, which in turned dragged the market down to its “666” level on the S&P 500 by March 2009.

In hindsight, I shouldn’t have been surprised to hear Prince Al-Waleed refer to Weill as “my good friend, Sandy Weil,” and cap that off by putting his arm around the Jewish New York banker.

Did I mention that Weill was Jewish?

Did I mention that Prince Al-Waleed had a very, very significant stake in Citigroup?

So this week, fast forward some 8 years and I saw this photo on CNBC this morning:

There was Howard Marks.

Founder of Oaktree Capital. An investor with his own acumen, A Nice Jewish boy from Ozone Park, Queens and most importantly, boyhood friend of Dr. Jack Dillenberg.

But Marks wasn’t the only prominent figure there having originally hailed from the 12 Tribes slightly to the north of Saudi Arabia. There were lots of familiar names and for those who believe in stereotyping, there was plenty to confirm those beliefs, but then again, those people in the habit of stereotyping don’t really need proof of anything.

Anyway, Howard Marks, along with others was there for the “Future Investment Initiative 2017.”

What is the “Future Investment Initiative 2017?”

Who better to explain than the ad campaign people for those seeking outside investment?

The Future Investment Initiative 2017 is “An initiative of the Public Investment Fund (PIF) of Saudi Arabia, FII is a pioneering new global investment event that will connect the world’s most powerful investors, business leaders, thought leaders and public officials with the path-breaking innovations that are defining the future.”

The Saudis want money to get them beyond their oil reserves and who better to get if from than their friends?

When I say “friends,” I mean “enemies,” but when money is at stake, those lines can become blurred.

That may be the actual point.

Ask Jack Dillenberg. Continue reading “Howard Marks in Saudi Arabia”

Visits: 10