Saturday, December 6, 2008

Michael Covel

Great traders know with mathematical certainty exactly what they are risking. They define risk to the decimal point. Michael Covel

Thursday, December 4, 2008

THE TRUTH AND CONCEPT OF PRICE

Donchian Students Were Trained to Be Trend Followers

(December 03, 2008)

Barbara Saslaw Dixon, a student of Richard Donchian, offered in 1974:

Technical analysis is based on market action, or price. The theory derives from basic economics. The price of a commodity at any given time is determined by the supply, the demand, the general economic outlook, the weather, the political climate, the optimism or the pessimism of the population, and other factors. The technician looks only at the price, since by itself it represents one side of the equation and thus encompasses all other inputs. The technician mentally substitutes the words buy for demand and sell for supply. Thus, when corn increases in price, the technician says that buying - demand - is increasing and that the price is going up. The Trend Follower makes no attempt to forecast the extent of a price move. His basic tenet is that once a trend begins, it has a tendency to persist in the same direction for some time. He devises precise rules to determine what, to his mind, constitutes a trend and identifies the situation when a trend has finished or reversed. He then further disciplines his thoughts into a strict set of conditions for entering and exiting the market. He acts on these rules to the exclusion of all other market factors. In so doing, a Trend Follower removes, hopefully, emotional judgmental influences from his individual market decisions.
Barbara Saslaw Dixon

On Good Systems

A good system is one that will keep you alive, keep your equity intact when there are no trends. The raison d'etre of any system is to insure that you are in the market when a trend establishes itself. The message is, don't give up Trend Following, even after a string of losses. That's just when the profits are due.
Barbara Saslaw Dixon

On Prediction

The successful Trend Follower doesn't attempt to predict price moves, nor does he expect to be right every time. He hops on board according to his signal once a trend has begun, and he lets his profits run. He makes no attempt to forecast the top or bottom of a price move. He hopes, of course, that it will continue indefinitely. He expects to make money over the long run, but on individual trades he admits when he's wrong and accepts many a [small] loss.
Barbara Saslaw Dixon

TurtleTrader comment: Her wisdom is as fresh today in 2002 as it was in 1974.

On System Design

When designing a system, I believe it's important to construct a set of rules which fit more like a mitten than like a glove. On the one hand, markets move in trends, but on the other hand, past results are not necessarily indicative of future performance. If you design a set of rules which fit the curve of your test data too perfectly, you run an enormous risk that it will fizzle under different future conditions.
Barbara Saslaw Dixon

On Curve Fitting

Contemporary databases, software, and hardware allow system developers to test thousands of ideas almost instantaneously. I caution these people about the perils of curve fitting. I urge them to remember that one of their primary goals is to achieve discipline which will enable them to earn profits. With so many great tools it's easy to change or modify a system and to develop indicators rather than rules, but is it always wise? I suggest they plan their research and conduct their studies in a systematic fashion. I remind them that systems and trading involve compromise - perfection is not achievable. Finally, I suggest they move slowly, that they look at trades on charts and not simply study printouts of hypothetical profits and losses.
Barbara Saslaw Dixon

How to Handle Unexpected Events?

Barbara Dixon's views on the unexpected:

Q. How is your systematic approach able to deal with unprecedented political and/or economic changes?

A. The historical data that systems traders use to construct and test their trading rules contain then-unprecedented political and economic events which impacted prices. In general, the data lack labels such as January 31, 1990: Start of Gulf War or September 16, 1992: Collapse of EMS. The point of systems trading is that the impact of such events is always reflected in the price (whatever the market) and that systems traders need not struggle to react when such events actually occur; they simply follow their rules.

NOTE: If you want to learn about trend following trading in general there is one definitive text: the bestselling classic "Trend Following: How Great Traders Make Millions in Up or Down Markets" by Michael Covel. If you want to learn about the most famous group of trained trend following traders, the Turtles and their teacher Richard Dennis, "The Complete TurtleTrader" by Michael Covel is the only complete biography (with all of the Turtle rules) available. If you want to learn trend following techniques and systems through advanced home study and or seminars click here.

Friday, November 28, 2008

George Bernard Shaw

People are always blaming their circumstances for what they are. I don't believe in circumstances. The people who get on in the world are the people who get up and look for the circumstances they want, and if they can't find them, make them. George Bernard Shaw

Trend Following Educational Seminars

Michael Covel
Entrepreneur & Author of The Complete TurtleTrader & bestseller Trend Following
Director of Documentary Film Broke: The New American Dream

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Trend Following Educational Seminars

In just a few months most of the world has come to the same conclusion: buy and hold is dead. Everyone knows now, deep in their gut, instinctively, that index investing (”long only”) could leave you underwater for a decade or longer. Survival, making sure you don’t lose all of your money, should be your paramount concern. Just trusting that things will bounce back, that a recovery is right around the corner, should only be an option for the mentally challenged. That said, real options to making money, strategies with decades of positive performance in all types of markets (both up and down), do exist, but thinking different will be critical.

Who: Individual traders (brand new to advanced) & emerging or established fund managers. This unique trading seminar is for anyone who wants the opportunity to learn how and why trend following fortunes were made over the course of 2008 and even more specifically learn how and why trend following traders made absolute fortunes during the single month of October 2008.

Benefits: Learn how to trade to make absolute returns, the potential big money opportunities, utilizing advanced trend following and system trading techniques. Learn how to psychologically let go of “long-only-buy-and-hold-dead-end” trading strategies. Further, learn insights that will help build and or grow a fund.

Scope of Training: Instruction in trading techniques, research and psychology of top Market Wizards. Also covered: risk management, leverage, stop loss issues, capital exposure, portfolio composition, portfolio correlation, trading software insights, drawdown, market strategy, business strategy, SEC and CFTC regulatory issues (if fund manager), online marketing, networking techniques (how to make contact with top traders) and war stories straight from top Market Wizards never before available. This offering is a “cook book” for those without access, but who want to learn. It is for those who can’t pick up the phone and arrange meetings with the top traders. It is a look behind the curtain at how great trading really works.

Specific Content: Clients will learn key money making trend trading insights in the form of video and or audio from the likes of Larry Hite, David Harding, Paul Tudor Jones, Bernard Drury, Salem Abraham, Bill Dunn, Richard Dennis, Bill Eckhardt, Jerry Parker, Salem Abraham, Toby Crabel, Millburn Ridgefield, and Michael Clarke to name a few. Also, included are audio interviews with multiple original Turtle traders conducted for the book “The Complete TurtleTrader“. Additional resources covered in instruction include:

1. A review of risk management principles behind one of the most successful hedge funds of all time. Nearly 80 pages of foundational risk management philosophies that have literally allowed billions of profit to be pulled from the markets.
2. A review of original Turtle notes presented to original Turtles in 1984-1985. This is research supplied by an original Turtle during the research process for the book “The Complete TurtleTrader“.
3. A rare screening of the famed “Trader” documentary starring one of the greatest traders of all time. Provides a fantastic look into the mind of a winner.
4. A review of rare historical documents and techniques behind the famed trend following incubator ‘Commodities Corporation‘.

One through four is but a small sample of the materials to be presented. No one will walk away from the entirety of these materials feeling like they did not receive extreme value.

Background: Michael Covel has presented before live audiences from Hong Kong to Tokyo to Paris to Macau (China) to Vienna (Austria) to Dallas (Texas) and is very comfortable with intense question and answer periods. Covel first began assisting clients with their trading education in 1996 through TurtleTrader.com. Thousands have taken the opportunity to learn trend following trading through one of the most popular home study courses ever offered. Clients from across 70 countries, from corporate clients to mom and pop investors, to complete beginners, have gained money making insights into arguably the most successful trading method ever - trend following. And now today, as the world watches market crashes, bailouts and volatility at extreme levels, trend following traders have made fortunes. October 2008, for example, saw many trend following traders produce returns ranging from +5% to +40% for a single month at a time when most of the world was losing a fortune. Covel’s effort to maintain some of the most unique trading content available online, his efforts to complete research for the book “Trend Following“, his efforts to complete research for the book “The Complete TurtleTrader” and his production of a new film documentary has enabled the assemblage of a treasure trove of video, audio and text based research. Covel’s interviews (audio and or video) with trading ‘Market Wizards’ of unparalleled track records is one of a kind. These were all assembled during Covel’s research process over the last 5 years. This content is not available in the Classic System and Trend Trading Course presented at TurtleTrader.com. These materials have not been released in a public forum until November 2008.

Original Clients: One client who purchased the Classic System and Trend Trading Course asked:

“Is the [seminar] the same subject?”

Specific materials for this seminar have not been made public until November 2008. The subjects, rooted in trend following and systems trading, are listed above. While the original home study course has helped and continues to help many, constant requests were received for even more research information. Requests to see and hear top traders were common. A seminar was the best option to meet this demand.

Note from Michael Covel: “People ask, ‘why teach?’ First, I am entrepreneur with a long history of successfully teaching clients trend following trading. Many clients, including multiple professional fund managers, got their start with my original home study course first launched in 1996. Second, while it is rewarding to see people excel and make money, I am a capitalist in the truest Ayn Rand sense (”I accept money for value”). While my time, energy, sweat equity, research & unique access to world class traders will never be properly valued, I do know my research and travel expenses alone have easily exceeded $100,000. Seminar pricing is cheap by comparison.”

When and How: In-person seminars for individuals and or groups by appointment. Seminars held in San Diego, CA or approved off site locations (including international locations). Additionally, all materials will be offered via home study options for those unable to travel. Seminars will be scheduled as one on one sessions or small corporate groups. Scheduling is by appointment only as too many different contingencies, with clients traveling from multiple domestic and international locations, makes scheduling large group events problematic. Additionally, one on one or small corporate groups allows for much quicker interactions. If a client can jump ahead faster, great. If a client needs a slower pace, that is fine too.

Seminar Materials Provided: Video, audio, market data, research data, extensive printed materials, online resources and PowerPoint presentations. The comprehensive nature of diverse content, including literally thousands of pages on top of seminar audio and video, builds personal confidence.

Location: The primary seminar location is beautiful San Diego, CA. Nearby hotels in San Diego’s historic Gaslamp District include The Omni and Ivy Hotel. San Diego map:

View Larger Map

Off-site seminars can be scheduled at locations worldwide.

Pricing: Pricing is for one on one instruction. Pricing will vary for firms (2+ attendees) and seminars outside San Diego. Seminar is a 2 day event (8 hour days), but some clients may be able to assemble material in 1 day. Additionally, pricing to receive materials as home study will differ from in-person training. Contact for pricing.

Discounts: All prior TurtleTrader.com clients seeking to attend seminar will receive a credit of 75% of their course purchase price that will be deducted from the total cost of seminar pricing.

Questions: You can email for more information or post questions here to be answered.
Michael Covel Biography

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Broke: The New American Dream
Broke: The New American Dream [FILM]

Michael Covel directs the first theatrical documentary tackling the 2007-2008 market crisis.

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Michael Covel reveals complete story and trading system of Richard Dennis and his student traders...

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Trend Following by Michael Covel [BOOK]

For more than 30 years, one trading strategy has consistently delivered extraordinary profits...

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Our trend following education is for those looking to trade Stocks, Currencies, Energies, Bonds, Grains, and Metals. Also, one of a kind in person training is now available. If you want to know how top traders made fortunes during the market crash of October 2008, we can show you.
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BERNARD BARUCH

Don't try to buy at the bottom and sell at the top. It can't be done except by liars.

Bernard Baruch

SYSTEMATIC TRADERS

"It is when the unimaginable occurs that the systematic trader remains calm, presciently knowing when to buy, sell, or adjust their exposure"

Mark Abraham, Abraham Trading

Saturday, November 22, 2008

Chancellor Angela Merkel warned that 2009 will be "a year of bad news"

AFP - Sunday, November 23

BERLIN (AFP) - - Chancellor Angela Merkel warned that 2009 will be "a year of bad news" for the economy, while a German regional bank announced it had secured Saturday up to 30 billion euros in state loan guarantees.

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"We must expect that next year will be a year of bad news, at least in the first months," Merkel was quoted as saying in an interview to be published in the Welt am Sonntag newspaper on Sunday.

She said it was harder than before to predict the progress of the international and German economic situations.

"We have stabilised the financial markets thanks to a series of measures for the banks, but confidence still has to be found again and the interbanking market must become functional again," Merkel said.

Berlin's Financial Markets Stabilisation Fund offers up to 400 billion euros in guarantees to get the interbank lending market functioning again, and up to 80 billion euros in direct cash infusions to bolster banks' balance sheets.

Merkel's comments came as HSH Nordbank announced it had obtained up to 30 billion euros (38.5 billion dollars) in loan guarantees, the largest chunk yet allocated from the special fund which was set up last month.

Based in the port of Hamburg and the state of Schleswig-Holstein, the regional public bank had requested government aid earlier this month.

"We are working on a series of concrete measures that will allow us to advance the future strategy of HSH Nordbank," interim chief executive officer Dirk Jens Nonnenmacher said after the deal was agreed late Friday.

Shareholders will "ensure that the bank benefits from equity accordingly," the bank said in a statement, adding that it had "different tools" at its disposal, with the elimination of assets a top target.

The board of directors and shareholders will meet in the coming weeks to discuss their options, the statement said.

The former head of Nordbank, Hans Berger, resigned on November 10 due to the financial crisis.

Announcing its plans on November 3 to seek state loan guarantees, the bank said it had recorded a net loss of 360 million euros in the third quarter of 2008.

It also wrote down the value of its assets by around one billion euros in the same period owing to the bankruptcy of US investment bank Lehman Brothers and financial turmoil in Iceland.

Nordbank's announcement came after Germany's biggest state-owned regional bank, Landesbank Baden-Wuerttemberg (LBBW), said Friday it may seek between 10 billion and 15 billion euros in loan guarantees from the government.

LBBW also said its owners -- the state of Baden-Wuerttemberg, the city of Stuttgart and local savings banks -- would provide five billion euros (6.3 billion dollars) in fresh capital.

Regional bank BayernLB was the first one to tap into the rescue package, getting a 5.4 billion euro capital injection from the government and one billion more euros from its regional shareholders.

Hypo Real Estate, Germany's biggest financial crisis casualty to date, said on Friday it has been given more help from Berlin with 20 billion euros (25 billion dollars) in loan guarantees.

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Bank Negara awards Islamic banking licences

Bank Negara awards Islamic banking licences


KUALA LUMPUR: Bank Negara awarded two foreign currency Islamic banking licences to companies in Kuwait and Indonesia as it seeks to broaden the country’s syariah finance success beyond the domestic market.

Kuwait’s Al-Aqeelah and Bank Muamalat Indonesia had been granted licences to do Islamic banking business in Malaysia with residents and non-residents in foreign currencies and limited ringgit transactions, central bank deputy governor Datuk Mohd Razif Abdul Kadir said yesterday.

“The process of setting up takes time, a few months perhaps,” Mohd Razif said. — Reuters

US$40 a barrel of oil?

US$40 a barrel of oil?


HOUSTON: The price for regular gasoline tumbled below US$2 a gallon (53 cents a liter) Friday, its lowest point in more than three years, and crude oil futures edged higher in volatile trading.

On the New York Mercantile Exchange, where oil futures seemed destined to breach $200 just a few months ago, pessimism was an understatement.

"At this point, all we can say with any degree of confidence is that crude oil ... will not trade below zero,'' trader and analyst Stephen Schork said Friday in a tongue-in-cheek analysis of the market's swoon.

Crude has been in free-fall, shedding two-thirds of its value since July, and gasoline prices have followed.

Some say oil could be headed below $40 a barrel.

Light, sweet crude for January delivery rose 51 cents to settle at $49.93 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange.

Earlier, in electronic trading, the price dipped to $48.25, the lowest level since May 18, 2005.

In London, January Brent crude rose $1.17 to settle at $49.19 on the ICE Futures exchange.

Friday's activity reflected just how closely oil traders have gauged the mood in equities markets over the past several weeks.

Wall Street moved higher Friday, with investors taking a breather from the heavy selling of recent days.

Energy and utility stocks showed some advances.

It was a different story earlier in the week.

The Dow plunged Thursday after the Labor Department said new applications for jobless benefits exceeded analyst estimates and rose to the highest level of claims since July 1992 and investors grew even more leery about the health of the nation's biggest banks.

Benchmark crude trailed Wall Street, falling as low as $48.50 a barrel.

In a note to clients Friday, Tudor Pickering Holt & Co. Securities said economic concerns are clearly trumping any further production cuts by the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries, which accounts for about 40 percent of global supply.

OPEC lowered production quotas by 1.5 million barrels a day last month, and some analysts predict even lower levels to come out of the cartel's next official meeting Dec. 17.

Such action "may not matter until folks have more visibility/comfort on (the) demand side,'' the Tudor Pickering note said.

Oil prices have been crushed as the global economic downturn has diminished demand.

How low prices can go is anyone's guess.

"Do not trust anyone in this market who tries to convince you that oil cannot go below $40,'' Schork said in his report Friday.

"The same way no one had a clue how high prices could go last July, there is no telling how low we can go now.''

Meanwhile, the pump price for regular unleaded gasoline fell 3.1 cents overnight to $1.989 a gallon, according to auto club AAA, the Oil Price Information Service and Wright Express.

That was the lowest since March 9, 2005, when retail gas cost less than $2 a gallon.

In other Nymex trading, gasoline futures rose 5.7 cents to settle at $1.0643 a gallon.

Heating oil gained 2.37 cents to settle at $1.6996 a gallon while natural gas for December delivery advanced 16.4 cents to settle at $6.532 per 1,000 cubic feet.

US stocks surge on report of Geithner nomination

US stocks surge on report of Geithner nomination


NEW YORK: Wall Street staged a comeback Friday, with the major indexes jumping more than five percent and the Dow Jones industrials surging nearly 500 points.

The late afternoon rally ended another volatile week that saw stocks reach six-year lows.

Stocks erased about half of the steep losses from Wednesday and Thursday, as investors got an unexpected jolt of confidence following an NBC News report that President-elect Barack Obama plans to name New York Federal Reserve President Timothy Geithner as Treasury secretary.

Investors have been looking for a clear message from Obama on who will lead his economic brain trust at a time when the country is facing its biggest financial crisis since the Great Depression.

In addition, some on Wall Street have grown frustrated with outgoing Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson over his handling of the government's effort to rescue the banking system.

"Something needed to be done on the economy,'' said Ben Halliburton, chief investment officer at Tradition Capital Management.

"The fact that they've got the team together, maybe that is going to shorten the period of indecision.''

A senior Democratic official familiar with the deliberations confirmed to The Associated Press that Geithner is likely to be named as Treasury secretary.

The official requested anonymity because the nomination hasn't been formally announced.

The advance in stocks also came as the FDIC said it would guarantee up to $1.4 trillion in U.S. banks' debt for more than three years as part of the government's financial rescue plan.

The directors of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. voted Friday to approve the plan, which is meant to break the crippling logjam in bank-to-bank lending.

Stocks fluctuated throughout most of trading Friday, as fresh concerns over the stability of the financial sector prevented the market from establishing any sustainable gains.

But stocks moved sharply higher in the final half hour after the report on Geithner.

The Dow rose 494.13 points, or 6.54 percent, to settle at 8,046.42.

The Standard & Poor's 500 index jumped 47.59, or 6.32 percent, to 800.03.

The Nasdaq composite advanced 68.23, or 5.18 percent, to 1,384.35.

The Russell 2000 index of smaller companies rose 21.23, or 5.51 percent, to 406.54.

Advancing issues outnumbered decliners by about 2 to 1 on the New York Stock Exchange, where volume came to 2.37 billion shares.

With the steep pullbacks earlier this week, the Dow began Friday's session down 43.1 percent this year, while the S&P 500 index - a benchmark for the overall U.S. stock market - was down 48.8 percent.

The Nasdaq composite index had lost 50.4 percent this year.

And despite Friday's gains, stocks are still down sharply for the week.

The Dow has lost 5.31 percent, while the S&P 500 fell 8.39 percent and the Nasdaq lost 8.74 percent.

Paper losses for the week in U.S. stocks came to $1 trillion, according to the Dow Jones Wilshire 5000 Composite Index, which reflects nearly all stocks traded in America.

In the two previous days, the Dow had lost a staggering 873 points, more than 10 percent of its value, and the broader Standard & Poor's 500 index had sunk to its lowest level since 1997.

Still, Friday's rally sets up the potential for more gains going forward, analysts said. "I think we're clearly set up for some sort of relief rally,'' Halliburton said.

"People have been holding their breath for a relief rally for weeks. Unfortunately, most of the rallies have been short-lived.''

But while the cloud of uncertainty surrounding Obama's economic team has been removed, there are still plenty of unknowns facing the market.

As a result, volatility will remain a major force on Wall Street for some time to come, said Jack Ablin, chief investment officer at Harris Private Bank in Chicago.

He said worries about marquee companies from General Motors Corp. to Citigroup Inc. are unnerving investors.

"What we're seeing is these symbols of American business history really suffering and prompting investors to call into question the viability of the system,'' Ablin said, referring to the functioning of the broader economy.

Investors have grown increasingly anxious this week that losses from souring debt will swamp banks, even those given financial support through the government's $700 billion rescue plan.

Citigroup, in particular, is a concern for Wall Street because the company hasn't booked a profit in the past four quarters.

As the banking giant's shares slid below $4, analysts said Friday it may be forced to merge or sell some of its prized businesses.

Citigroup has already raised $75 billion in capital this year, including a $25 billion cash investment from the government - and none of it has been enough to muster confidence.

Investors have also worried about the fate of GM, Ford Motor Co. and Chrysler LLC.

The heads of the companies, warning that automakers are perilously low on cash, have been asking Washington for $25 billion in loans.

But lawmakers have likely put off a vote on whether to extend a lifeline until next month and have asked the automakers for detailed plans about how they would use the money.

The prospect of a bankruptcy filing by one or more of the companies has added to Wall Street's worries about the state of the economy.

Bond prices fell Friday as credit markets eased somewhat following a freeze-up Thursday.

The yield on the benchmark 10-year Treasury note, which moves opposite its price, jumped to 3.19 percent from 3.00 percent late Thursday.

The yield on the three-month T-bill, considered one of the safest investments, rose to 0.02 percent from 0.01 percent late Thursday.

Light, sweet crude for January delivery rose 51 cents to settle at $49.93 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange.

The dollar fell against other major currencies, while gold prices rose.

Japan's Nikkei stock average jumped 2.70 percent.

In European trading, Britain's FTSE 100 fell 2.43 percent, while Germany's DAX index fell 2.20 percent, and France's CAC-40 fell 3.33 percent.

Khaled: Get laid-off academics back

Khaled: Get laid-off academics back


PASIR GUDANG: Local universities should take the opportunity to hire Malaysian academics retrenched by foreign universities.

Higher Education Minister Datuk Seri Khaled Nordin said many Malaysian academics currently serving in foreign universities were expecting to be retrenched due to the recession in several developed countries.

He said local universities could benefit from this by employing these academics.

The Government is giving total freedom to universities to engage or hire these academics under the brain-gain project discussed in the Economic Council, he said after the opening of Dynac Sdn Bhds new office and delivery of air cooled heat exchanger to Sarawak Shell Bhd on Saturday.

Khaled said the ministry and universities would collaborate in the project but it was up to each university to identify the niche areas when hiring these academics.

He said graduates were unemployed due to the mismatch of what they learned in the universities and the requirements by the industry and changes in technology.

“We have always stressed that university graduates should be all rounders and able to adapt to change around them,” said Khaled.

He said the council had also requested college communities nationwide to provide training and new skills to retrenched workers including Malaysians working in Singapore.

CEOs, famous investors hit hard by market plunge

CEOs, famous investors hit hard by market plunge

NEW YORK (AP) — Here's something that might provide a bit of solace amid the plunging values in your retirement accounts: Warren Buffett is losing lots of money, too. So are Kirk Kerkorian, Carl Icahn and Sumner Redstone.

They are still plenty rich, but their losses — some on paper and others actually realized — illustrate how few have been spared in today's punishing market when even big-name investors, corporate executives and hedge-fund titans are all watching their wealth evaporate.

The portfolio damage for some of these high-flyers has soared to billions of dollars in recent months. And they can't just blame the market's downdraft — some did themselves in with badly timed stock purchases or margin calls on shares bought with loans.

"It's always hard to beat the market no matter who you are," said Robert Hansen, senior associate dean at Dartmouth's Tuck School of Business. "But when the ocean waters get that rough, it is hard for any boat to avoid getting swamped."

It has been a painful year for anyone exposed to the stock market. The Standard & Poor's 500 stock index, considered a barometer for the broad market, has lost about 36 percent since January, with every single sector — including once thriving energy and utilities — seeing declines of about 20 percent or more.

Such losses in the last year have wiped out an estimated $2 trillion in equity value from 401(k) and individual retirement accounts, nearly half the holdings in those plans, according to new findings by the Center for Retirement Research at Boston College. Similar losses are seen in the portfolios of private and public pension plans, which have lost $1.9 trillion, the researchers found.

As stocks have plunged, so have the value of chief executives' equity stakes in their own companies. The average year-to-date decline is 49 percent for the corporate stock holdings of CEOs at 175 large U.S. companies, according to new research by compensation consulting firm Steven Hall & Partners.

Topping that list is Buffett, who has seen the value of equity in his company, Berkshire Hathaway, fall by about $13.6 billion, or 22 percent, so far this year, to leave his holdings valued at $48.1 billion. Oracle founder and CEO Larry Ellison has seen his equity stake fall by $6.2 billion, or about 24 percent, to $20.1 billion, according to the research that ran from the start of the year through the close of trading Oct. 29.

Rounding out the top five in that study were Microsoft's Steve Ballmer, whose company equity fell by $5.1 billion to $9.4 billion; Amazon.com's Jeff Bezos, whose equity fell by $3.6 billion to $5.7 billion; and News Corp.'s Rupert Murdoch, with a $4 billion contraction to $3 billion.

News Corp. and Microsoft declined comment, while representatives from Berkshire Hathaway, Oracle and Amazon.com didn't respond to requests for comment.

Those results included the value of the CEOs' stock, exercisable and non-exercisable stock options and shares that haven't yet vested. They are drawn from each company's most recent proxy statement, which means they might not include subsequent stock purchases or sales.

"Everyone wants to see executives have skin in the game, and this shows they certainly do," said Steven Hall, a founder and managing director of the compensation consulting firm. "But in the end, we have to remember they still have billions to fall back on."

But there have been recent instances where executives' large equity positions have blown up — not only damaging a particular CEO's portfolio but the company's shareholders, too.

A growing number of executives at companies including Boston Scientific, XTO Energy Corp. and Williams Sonoma Inc. have been forced to sell stakes in their companies to cover stock loans to banks and brokers. The company stock was used as collateral for those loans. The falling prices triggered what is known as a "margin call."

"A decrease in insider ownership is bad for corporate governance," said Ben Silverman, director of research at the research firm InsiderScore.com. "Then executives' interests are less aligned with their shareholders."

Investors in Chesapeake Energy Corp. were recently faced with the surprising news that company CEO Aubrey McClendon was forced to sell almost 95 percent of his holdings — representing more than a 5 percent stake in the natural gas giant — to meet a margin call. His firesale of more than 31 million shares, valued at nearly $570 million, put downward pressure on Chesapeake's stock in the days surrounding the mid-October transaction.

McClendon has called this a personal matter and said he would rebuild the ownership position, according to Chesapeake spokesman Tom Price.

Redstone, the famed 85-year-old chairman and controlling shareholder of CBS Corp. and Viacom Inc., was forced to sell $233 million worth of nonvoting shares in those companies. That was done to satisfy National Amusements' loan covenants, which had been violated when the value of its CBS and Viacom shares fell below required levels in the loan agreements.

National Amusements is Redstone's family holding company, and the stock sales represented 20 percent of the holding company's CBS shares and 10 percent of its Viacom shares. A spokesman for National Amusements declined to comment.

Certainly some of the biggest investors aren't happy with recent market events.

Earlier this year, billionaire Kerkorian's investment firm Tracinda Corp. paid about $1 billion, at an average share price of near $7.10, for about 141 million shares in Ford Motor Corp. That represented a 6.49 percent stake in Ford.

Those shares have tumbled as the automaker's financial condition weakened considerably amid slumping sales and tighter credit conditions. That drove Tracinda to disclose twice in recent weeks that it was selling some of its Ford stock — one batch of 7.3 million shares sold at an average price of $2.43 each, and the other for 26.4 million shares at an average sale price of $2.01 each. That means for about a quarter of his total Ford holdings, he got $71 million.

Tracinda spokeswoman Winnie Lerner declined to comment.

Activist investor Icahn faces an equally ugly situation with his investment in Yahoo Inc. earlier this year, when he bought about 69 million shares for a nearly 5 percent ownership stake. As of June 30, those shares were valued at about $20.60 each, according to a regulatory filing.

Over the summer, he fought hard to get Yahoo's board to agree to a takeover by Microsoft Corp., a deal that never went through. As a concession, Icahn got a seat on the Yahoo board for himself and two allies.

But his Yahoo holdings are off sharply, with the company's shares trading around $13 each. That means he's down more than $500 million since late June. Icahn didn't respond to a request for comment.

As Tuck's Hansen notes, the current market conditions are serving up a reality check — not just for individual investors but for the biggest names around.

"Fishing isn't called catching, and investing isn't just called making money," Hansen said. "We have to remember that things can go down by a lot."

Investor fear remains deep despite 1-day rally

Investor fear remains deep despite 1-day rally

Obama's Economic Plan Play Video ABC News – Obama's Economic Plan
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A giant American flag is reflected in the glasses of trader Bradley Silverman as AP – A giant American flag is reflected in the glasses of trader Bradley Silverman as he works on the floor …

NEW YORK – Since the Nov. 4 election, investors have been abandoning stocks in a kind of slow-motion crash that experts say underlines just how anxious they are about what is likely to be a long and deep recession.

Even after a late-day rally on Friday, the benchmark Standard & Poor's 500 index has plunged 20 percent since the election. That more than wiped out the index's 18 percent gain in the six trading days ahead of the balloting as optimism grew that Barack Obama would be elected president.

Analysts aren't blaming Obama specifically for the postelection hangover. Rather, they peg it to growing fears that the Bush Administration and Congress are fumbling the $700 billion bailout plan and the weakened economy's impact on financial stocks — highlighted by the plunge in shares of Citigroup Inc. to below $4 a share.

"You can almost hear people yelling, 'Get me out at any price,' " said Al Goodman, chief market strategist at Wachovia Securities. "It's the highest level of fear and depression in my 45 years as a student of the market."

Market experts define a crash as a decline of 20 percent over a single day or several days. Over seven trading days that ended Oct. 9, the Dow lost 22 percent.

This month, the S&P 500 skidded more than 25 percent in the 12 trading days after the election before a bounceback on Friday narrowed the loss to 20 percent.

All told, stocks have lost a stunning $2.6 trillion since Nov. 4, as measured by the Dow Jones Wilshire 5000 index, which reflects the value of nearly all U.S. stocks.

The Friday afternoon news that Obama is likely to choose Timothy Geithner, the president of the New York Federal Reserve, to be the next Treasury secretary helped spark a rally that sent the Dow Jones industrial average surging almost 500 points.

Geithner has worked closely with Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson and Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke this year as the government seized control of mortgage giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac and insurer American International Group Inc.

But analysts say it would be a mistake to say Friday's market reversal marks an end to the carnage that has wiped out 45.8 percent of the value of the S&P 500 index since the start of the year.

"I don't think anyone can say we've reached the bottom yet," said Chuck Gabriel, managing director of Capital Alpha Partners in Washington. "It's going to be a very gloomy Christmas."

Kim Caughey, equity research analyst at Fort Pitt Capital Group in Pittsburgh, said that "for investors to get more confidence, we need to know details" of the new administration's plans to handle the crisis.

"There's been a vacuum of leadership" she added, "and when that happens, you get fear and rumors, and then people sell."

Obama on Saturday outlined his plan to create 2.5 million jobs by January 2011 to rebuild roads and bridges and modernize schools while developing alternative energy sources and more efficient cars.

"These aren't just steps to pull ourselves out of this immediate crisis; these are the long-term investments in our economic future that have been ignored for far too long," Obama said in the weekly Democratic radio address.

His goal is to get the plan quickly through Congress, with help from both parties, after Obama takes office Jan. 20.

The government reported last week that new claims for jobless benefits rose to a 16-year high. And while prices for gasoline and other consumer goods are falling, that's raising fears that a deflationary environment would further zap spending and corporate profits.

The market's inability to turn around also has fed criticism of the government's handling of the crisis.

Since being rolled out a month ago, the Treasury Department-administered bailout has undergone two major revisions. One was its abandonment of the original plan to buy banks' toxic assets. The second was its decision to let the Obama administration decide how to spend the second half of the $700 billion.

"It doesn't instill confidence; it erodes it," Joe Battipaglia, market strategist at Stifel Nicolaus, said of the shifts in course.

"The perception on Wall Street is that Washington is rudderless," he added. "There's no leadership on the pressing issues of the day ... and time is running out."

Anxiety about the rescue plan has punished shares of the nation's biggest banks, which received $125 billion in government capital injections under the rescue plan. Shares of financial service companies on the S&P 500 have fallen 41 percent since the election and 23 percent in the past week.

None have suffered like Citigroup. The global banking titan's shares slid a combined 55 percent Thursday and Friday and ended the week at $3.77 on fears that it will have to take even bigger charges for loan losses. The stock traded as high as $35.29 last December.

Citigroup's fall despite taking billions in bailout dollars "has really scared the market," said John Lynch, chief market analyst at Evergreen Investments. "The government is throwing everything at (the crisis), and yet Citi is still under $5. That's an alarm."

Also rattling investors have been troubled congressional talks on whether the government should bail out the Detroit automakers. The failure to get a deal done upset markets earlier in the week and could further threaten the stock market if left dangling.

"The market wants this stuff resolved," said Jack A. Ablin, chief investment officer at Harris Private Bank in Chicago.

Some investors have seized on the auto industry tumult as a sign of the perils facing the economy — prompting them to pull money out of the market.

"Individual investors have remained pretty cool throughout most of this downturn .... but I am starting to hear from clients saying basically, 'We're already down this much. Should we throw in the towel' " and sell everything?

"Most of them are in good shape, but the erosion of dollars and cents does impact their psychology," he said.

____

AP writer Will Lester in Washington contributed to this report.

Elsewhere on th

Friday, November 21, 2008

Alhamdulillah, Michael Jackson is now a Muslim

Michael Jackson is now a Muslim, Alhamdulillah.

Obama moves to pick Geithner for Treasury

Obama moves to pick Geithner for Treasury

Hillary Clinton reportedly accepts Obama's offer Play Video Reuters – Hillary Clinton reportedly accepts Obama's offer
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(From left) Senator Hillary Clinton, New Mexico Governor Bill Richardson, and Reuters – (From left) Senator Hillary Clinton, New Mexico Governor Bill Richardson, and Timothy F. Geithner, President …

CHICAGO (Reuters) – President-elect Barack Obama on Friday moved toward nominating Timothy Geithner as Treasury secretary and charging the respected head of the New York Federal Reserve with helping pull the United States out of an economic nosedive.

New York Sen. Hillary Clinton appeared headed to be nominated as Obama's secretary of state, bringing his one-time main Democratic rival into the fold in a pivotal role in his new administration.

Geithner, 47, had been seen as one of two main candidates for the Treasury job along with former Clinton administration Treasury chief Lawrence Summers.

U.S. stocks soared on the Geithner news, first reported by NBC News, pushing major indices up more than 6 percent. The Dow Jones industrial average closed above 8,000, an important psychological trading level.

Obama may consider Summers as a possible successor to Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke, whose term ends in January 2010, a Democratic source said.

Clinton, wife of former President Bill Clinton, appeared set to take the top U.S. diplomatic post after wrestling with whether she wanted to give up her Senate seat.

"We're still in discussions, which are very much on track. Any reports beyond that are premature," Clinton senior adviser Philippe Reines told Reuters.

The New York Times said it was a done deal. "She's ready," The Times quoted one of two Clinton associates who confirmed the deal as saying.

A senior Democrat told Reuters in Washington that Obama wanted Geithner for the Treasury job, but had yet to make an offer. He did confirm that Summers was no longer under consideration. "Summers is off the list," he said.

The New York Times reported that Obama was likely to name Summers as an economic adviser with the expectation that he will eventually be tapped for the Federal Reserve Board and perhaps as Bernanke's successor.

MARKET BOOST

Obama, who beat Republican John McCain in the November 4 election, takes over from George W. Bush on January 20. He has been largely hunkered down in Chicago since the election working on his administration team.

NBC News said Obama was expected to announce Geithner and other members of his economic team Monday in an effort to calm U.S. financial markets that have sunk like a stone all week before Friday's surge.

"A fantastic choice to help lead the financial markets out of the wilderness," said Chris Rupkey, senior economist at The Bank of Tokyo-Mitsubishi in New York, of Geithner. "A crisis manager par excellence who will hit the ground running as he has been on the case since the global funding crisis began way back in July 2007."

If confirmed by the U.S. Senate as Treasury secretary, Geithner would be at the helm of efforts to guide the country out of the financial crisis, which some analysts predict could lead to the worst economic downturn since the Great Depression.

NBC also said New Mexico Gov. Bill Richardson -- who was one of a crowded pack of Democratic presidential candidates early this year -- could get Obama's nod to become commerce secretary.

Richardson's elevation to the cabinet would give the Obama administration its first high-profile Hispanic member as its main liaison to the business community. Richardson was a United Nations ambassador and energy secretary under former President Bill Clinton.

NATIONAL SECURITY FRONTRUNNER

Obama's early moves got the thumbs up from the Senate's Republican leader, Mitch McConnell, who said he believed the Obama team was preparing to "govern in the middle and tackle big things."

"I think the new administration is off to a good start," he told reporters on Capitol Hill.

Democrats increased their majority in the Senate and U.S. House of Representatives in the November 4 vote.

Set to become the first black U.S. president, Obama will inherit a deeply unpopular war in Iraq and another war in Afghanistan, where violence has soared, and will seek to rebuild relationships with allies, particularly in Europe.

Retired Marine Gen. James Jones has emerged as a leading contender for White House national security adviser, according to Democratic sources. Jones is a former top operational commander of NATO.

Obama is also leaning toward keeping Defense Secretary Robert Gates. Gates, who replaced the combative Donald Rumsfeld in 2006, is praised by both Republicans and Democrats in Congress for overseeing a military strategy shift in Iraq that helped bring the country back from the brink of civil war.

(Editing by Kristin Roberts and Frances Kerry)