Archive for September, 2009

  • Deep ‘New Economy’ Thoughts – AssSphincterSaysWhat?

    Posted by admin on September 29th, 2009

    I don’t get social gaming.

    Based on Zynga’s numbers , I am waaaaaay in the minority and that is pretty much all that matters.

    I don’t have anything against people playing ‘Farmville’ or ‘Scrabble’ or the thousand of other social games on line. I TWEET for god’s sake.

    I try to invest my time and money in products, services I understand or am immersed in.

    In trying to understand the model, I read Chris Dixon’s post on ‘The New Economy ‘. Oy.

    Any internet business is tough. Zynga is no doubt killing it and has a gusher of profits and maybe a secret formula (I doubt it as it’s not just traffic), but color me skeptical of too many others figuring it out.

    It will be a hit’s business and much like the current gaming industry should see few winners and lot’s of consolidation and quick knockoff’s when a winner is spotted.

    The New Economy is obviously about getting to the longtail and doing it as fast as you can. Social gaming does seem to be a very quick way to that longtail for those who want to take their shot.

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  • Expanded Line Up Tuesdays on StockTwits.TV

    Posted by admin on September 29th, 2009

    Starting tomorrow, we are adding a ton of goodness to Tuesdays on StockTwits.TV.
    We already have great live programming on Tuesdays which includes broadcasts from both @UpsideTrader at 12pm Eastern and @StevenPlace at 2:30pm.
    To this we are going to add the following:
    1. ValuePlaysTV at 8:30pm – @ToddSullivan has simply been killing the market and his ValuePlays.net [...]

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  • Overheard on StockTwits: Melt-Up Merger Monday

    Posted by admin on September 29th, 2009

    While oil is up a little today, the market hasn’t really responded like one would think regarding the Iran situation.  One has to think that either the market has already priced in some level of Iranian disruption, or priced out an sort of military response.

    There is a ton of overthinking in general going on this [...]

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  • Overheard on StockTwits: Mixed Signals

    Posted by admin on September 25th, 2009

    Interesting comments by two knowledgeable guys. They are referring to an op-ed by the Fed’s Warsh where he says that the Fed may have to act aggressively to mop up the liquidity they’ve added over the last 1-2 years.

    Today was an interesting morning.  The bear’s case got a boost with $RIMM news, durable goods, and [...]

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  • Angel Investing Playbook….That’s Absurd!

    Posted by admin on September 25th, 2009

    I say ‘that’s abusrd’ a lot when I talk about the stock market.

    The stock market is an absurd, mystical, living, breathing monster that feeds on our energy.

    As absurd as the market can be, so to is the life of an entrepreneur and investor.

    The best ‘TELL’ I know for angel investing is to double down when I utter ‘that’s absurd‘!

    My biggest mistakes of the last few years are from private investments that I shunned for ‘ABSURD’ valuations. The only thing that has been absurd is the returns I have left on the table.

    I have made two MONDO mistakes the last few years and none of them are stock market related. All of them were teed up.

    1. Fred Wilson offered me an early stage investment in Twitter and I asked “what price?”. When I heard the price I responded…’Are You Absurd’!? Let’s also just say that at the time, I wrote a post that Twitter was for Twits . Today they closed on $100 million at a $1 billion valuation. At least I have the $TWIT stream…

    Oy.

    2. When Mark Pinkus was was creating Zynga and pitching me the early iteration, I told him I was in and good for a piece. By the time the official round got going, Fred Wilson called and offered me a piece and I asked “what price?”. When I heard the price I responded…’Are You Absurd!?’ . Today….OY. I heard that Farmville ( a new Zynga game ) had 15 MILLION players the other day. At least I never wrote a post ‘Is Zynga for ZITS’…so that’s a consolation.

    The lesson…

    I am a putz.

    PS – I was lucky/smart enough to invest in Betaworks which started Summize which was purchased by Twitter…so booyah!

    PSS – The genius that took my Twitter investment…Jeff Pulver . He’s a gentleman and always lets me in free to his twitter conferences. Really.

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  • Trader Spotlight: FuturesTrader71 Trading the Fed

    Posted by admin on September 24th, 2009

    Yesterday, amongst all the awesomeness on the stream around the Fed announcement, we noticed something truly remarkable from one of the newest additions to the Top Data Junkies – @FuturesTrader71.
    Not only did @FuturesTrader71 make a great trade in the $ES_F, but really exemplified how powerful  a medium StockTwits can be for communicate trading ideas and [...]

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  • Overheard on StockTwits: Fedtweet

    Posted by admin on September 24th, 2009

    The first move is usually the fake move and while it took a little more than 10 minutes this time, he had the right trading plan before the Fed

    Somewhat cynical observation on the Fed but one that seems to be correct on the Fed ever since Greenspan.

    The initial reactions were rally on the news, which [...]

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  • Deep Market Thoughts…Overnight Success is a Myth!

    Posted by admin on September 23rd, 2009

    I have no doubt that the mobile and social web are in inning TWO to borrow from my often used baseball analogy. The veteran venture capitalist in mobile will tell you horror stories and to stay away from this ‘Fekukta’ space, but I just think they were too early. The iPhone was day one of the true smartphone.

    As entrepreneurs, investors and people focused on making a living, America, despite all the hip and negative talk that we are broke (we truly are and it matters ), is at the center of the universe for social web and a key growth spot in the smartphone explosion.

    There are many exciting ways to invest in the demise of America, it’s why I invest in other currencies and own some metal and commodity stocks, but it’s very crowded. It’s very noisy at the public stock market level. Furthermore, I prefer to invest the bulk of my time and money in growth areas that I understand from the get go and areas that I can be passionately knowledgeable.

    As Om Malik perfectly summarizes again today, the ‘Great Internet Buildout Continues ‘…and it’s a great fast read on what’s at stake and what needs to happen. Read it and let’s discuss ideas that will best capitalize on the continued buildout.

    There are so many exciting, uncrowded ways to capitalize on just this one simple theme. Despite the bleak all-time high list for me to choose from in the public markets until very recently, my conviction in this trend has my portfolio loaded to the gills in the continued build out and I am having a continued blast being a part of the jetstream.

    I have chosen to focus on the ‘Social’ aspect of the buildout and the sales and marketing niches that are developing. That’s where I feel my personal edge is when attached to this sector. I had my Social Web moment in 2005 when I started a blog on Google and got my first few positive comments. I was hooked. Today, those ‘moments’ are coming fast and furious . They are happening at an exponential rate.

    To further drive home my thinking, here is a video that I watch often when I get nervous about my lack of recent diversification or conviction in the mostly profitless space to date:

    Remember that you can learn to trade and make a living off the public markets, you should develop a real edge in an area of long-term burgeoning growth and participate privately, as an entreprenuer and as a public market investor. That’s how you will create long-term wealth.

    Overnight success is a myth.

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  • Deep Market Thoughts – Ready…Aim…Chase!?!?

    Posted by admin on September 23rd, 2009

    I can totally understand the panic setting in on money managers as we head into the fourth quarter. I have been there, done that.

    Like stand-up comedy (although you don’t get paid for sucking), being a hedge fund manager and money manager can be pretty stressful day in day out.

    As I look at all the price evidence for stocks I am bullish, but I find myself short some indices against my long stock positions. Adding up all my short sales and hedges since the March 9th bottom and it has cost my fund real money…about 4 percent in total.

    For those that say, well that 4 percent gave me ‘peace of mind’ they are wrong or rationalizing losing positions. The 4 percent is not without it’s additional costs like the time it takes to manage the positions or the extra aggravation of just being wrong and fighting the tape. I have been stubborn, but this blog is the place where I try to clear my head because I don’t always practice what I preach.

    Although I love momentum, I hate when I chase. I try to do the opposite of chase. When I started my hedge fund and managing other people’s money in ‘98, I took on all clients that would have me. When you do that, you must perform in all markets, therefore you chase returns. You become a slave to the market.

    As I have slowly built the business I want, I can avoid doing the things that made me insane. The chasing.

    If you are managing your own money or have a broker managing it for you, it’s the one piece of advice worth sharing confidently…don’t chase.

    The stock market is an opportunity machine. In March, few thought the market would see ONE up day. I read somewhere that we had an all-time record of 8-9 up days in a row for the S&P at one point last week. You get the drift…

    The stock setups from the long side are thick. It looks like they will remain that way for a while – so don’t chase.

    The armchair economists are talking V-Shape, U shaped, Double dip…asshats all of them. None of them warned of the cliff shaped drop we saw in the market and if they did, they were 4 years early. The few that timed it, missed the 60 percent rally. My pal Joe had a great post last week called ‘Bubblicious’.

    The economists and fear mongers don’t see the markets for the opportunity machine it is. They don’t see the 5-10,000 ideas a day being passed around on Stocktwits .

    Lucky us.

    If you are ‘too small to fail’ you don’t chase. You are nimble and you pick your opportunities. You don’t have to be engaged day in day out.

    Three big picture charts stand out for me this week. The first is one of a real estate index $IYR . Of course we can continue rallying, but a huge battle of sellers and buyers is ahead of us. Consider all the once buried investors in this index from last year who will be selling at every tick as they approach break even. That’s a battle where the sellers should have the upper hand now on a risk/reward basis.

    The second is of the historical moves to extremes in the NYSE bullish percent index . Though anything can happen, major odds are on the sellers taking a bit of control at some point in the very near future.

    Third is the 12 month rolling returns for the averages , which I have shared more than any chart the last 8 months. Although we are now creeping higher and will shoot higher if the averages just sit here, based on how bad it really got , the rolling returns could still have a huge move to the upside and not be out of historical character.

    We don’t have to pick turns in the market, but we have to still do the work and read the tea leaves. Hope this helps.

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  • Stockcamp…Here Is The Lowdown…October 2 Nasdaq Marketsite

    Posted by admin on September 23rd, 2009

    On October 2 we are having our first StockCamp with Nasdaq at the Nasdaq Marketsite.

    Here is the Event Information and there is still room . Come and help us put names to the avatars.

    There is a great list of attendees and although the event will have plenty of time for meet and greet and answering questions for the community, there are some fantastic guests that we will be building one on one interviews and panels around.

    One subject that people ask me all the time and we want to tackle is ‘How do I get into the money management (hedge fund) business?’

    Joe Donohue (upside), Barry Ritholtz, Todd Stottlemyre, Phil Pearlman, Jim (Aiki14) myself and others will talk about how to get into the business and or a hedge fund started.

    Another goal of the Camp is…

    The amount of data and ideas I am now receiving seems overwhelming, how do I organize it?

    We will use some of our time to give attendees a peak into how the best traders filter information and use the tools around them to discover talent and manage information flow. The experts attending include David Aferiat of Trade-Ideas and our friends from SMB Capital.

    Alan Murray (Deputy Editor of The Wall Street Journal), and I will also sit down and have a discussion with the audience on how the financial industry is evolving with new media like Twitter and Stocktwits.

    The Nasdaq will be sharing some data products with the community and using them in real-time to teach us how they best can be integrated into your trading/investing life.

    There are a lot more guests with 100’s of combined years of experience in the money management and trading space to mingle and share stories.

    Please use the comments below to suggest other topics of discussion for the StockCamp.

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