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I was at Deloitte’s TMT Prediction 2010 launch event yesterday morning at the Fairmont – The Queen Elizabeth Hotel. Here is a recap of the event and some thought on the predictions and the discussions we had during the event, including Google and Twitter. I’ll also write about Twitter and try to convince Duncan Stewart, the Director of Deloitte Canada Research: Technology, Media & Telecommunications, Life Sciences and GreenTech of why Twitter is a force to be reckoned with and is here to stay. In fact, by the time I finish this post, I have the intention of convincing any Business, Finance, Technology, Media or Telecommunication person reading it of the high value there is in following me, reading my blog and working with me for Business and Web Strategy, Industry and Business Analysis.

Winning the MyTMT Prediction 2010

This time around, Deloitte actually launched a competition called MyTMT prediction, opening it to the public. I was glad to be in the five finalists and also learn during the event that I won the competition with my prediction that Google is poised to massively disrupt the traditional Telecom Industry, to the applause of approximately 200 Business and Media people during the launch event yesterday, January 19th in Montreal.

Business Strategy

Many people have asked me what the prize was. It was recognition, from the Jury, from a big consulting firm like Deloitte and also many people in the Technology, Media and Telecommunication industries. I also won exposure, mingling with like-minded people, and participating in the conversation about foreseeing and predicting where Technology is bringing us and how it impacts our Businesses and lives. As Deloitte themselves argue, the value of the Predictions event is to

explore emerging trends that will have an impact on Canadian businesses in 2010.

and to

helping their clients evaluate complex issues, develop fresh approaches to problems, and implement practical solutions.

There are dedicated TMT practices in 45 countries in the Americas, EMEA, and Asia Pacific. DTT’s member firms serve 92 percent of the TMT companies in the Fortune Global 500. Clients of Deloitte’s member firms’ TMT practices include some of the world’s top software companies, computer manufacturers, semiconductor foundries, wireless operators, cable companies, advertising agencies, and publishers.

About the research
The 2010 series of Predictions has drawn on internal and external inputs including: conversations with TMT companies, contributions from DTT member firms’ 7,000 partners and senior practitioners specializing in TMT, discussions with financial and industry analysts, and conversations with trade bodies.

Being able to foresee where things are going allows strategizing, planning for the long run. Being able to monitor things allow for swift changing of Business tactics so that the changing environment can have less deleterious effects.

This is why Deloitte’s TMT Predictions 2010 is essential reading:

  • Technology Predictions 2010
  • Media Predictions 2010
  • Telecommunications 2010
  • Similarly, somebody reading my blog back then in 2005 would have already known the pitfalls of using Microsoft’s Internet Explorer based on quasi-prophetic words at the time, totally vindicated by the recent huge security debacle involving Microsoft, Google, China, and some other 30-odd U.S. firms this January:

    During and after these brushes with Justice, Microsoft officials have repeatedly been heard chanting the mantra “Innovation, Innovation. If Microsoft is broken into smaller pieces, we won’t be able to do our Innovation.”

    But see, before all this, by bundling their inferior Internet Explorer with Windows, they still managed to make IE the most used browser on the planet since they also force Windows down the throat of the PC-buying customer.

    But once they achieved this, what do you think they did with IE? Do you think they kept on innovating, adding features to it, sorting out the kinks, supporting Internet Standards?

    No, they sat on it for 3 years. And since IE is a security hazard, the flaws were rapidly exploited. Last year, there were countless storied of PCs being hijacked by spyware, popups everywhere, people tearing their hair off, going mad.

    All of this because Microsoft in intent on dominating a segment but does not really care about the customer, nor about innovation. And once they do, and every time a finger points at them, they will strive to cover everything up in marketing or P.R.

    Not only that, but the Mozilla team, true to Open Source spirit, regularly updated the browser. More specifically, they patched any flaw very rapidly.

    Typically, Microsoft will take weeks before even acknowledging a flaw, and if they patch it, the user is left with a vulnerable system for months.

    Internet Explorer 7 will still be flawed. The problem is Microsoft.

    MS’s IE7 will still be flawed. Microsoft still hasn’t learned to support open standards and they still haven’t learned to released a secure software. Instead they are still rushing bug-ridden software and covering it up with P.R. and marketing millions, the latest case being Visual Studio 2005.

    Then they also want you to get their Windows Defender anti-spyware software. How come they cannot patch their faulty software first and foremost?

    Microsoft hasn’t learned and won’t learn from its mistakes. It’s a monopoly and feels safe enough there. So it will rely on weird tactics for a long time. Like removing all trace of some Linux-bashing articles from the Internet. Like funding pseudo-neutral analysts to tout their software and bash alternatives. Like spreading Fear, Uncertainty and Doubt about alternate products. Like enabling only passport-registered people to post comments on their inane MS-marketing blogs. And who posts there? Well those who have MS passports, that is, MS employees primarily and who will do some mutual back-slapping hoping the community takes it up (astro-turfing – a fake grass root marketing approach). Like stubbornly not supporting Open Standards. Like pissing off customers, partners, and employees all at once. Like creating an artificial shortage of XBox 360.

    The choice is yours. Make the best one.

    You have the choice to try an alternative: the best browser in the world.

    Microsoft has been at it again: trying to minimize the seriousness of the security issues, while bashing other browsers. The Web, however, is quick to point out the flawed reasoning:

    Mashable – Microsoft downplays Internet Explorer security holes

    It takes years to change an ingrained company culture with blessings of wrongdoing from above, and knowing the software engineering advantages of open-source (“With enough eyeballs, all bugs are shallow” – Eric S. Raymond), I knew there were fundamental problems with the company itself.

    My point of view is validated today with entire governments like France and Germany saying no to Internet Explorer and urging to do the same, but only with 4 years of delay…

    So, if you would like to know what I think of where the future in Business and Technology lies, here are the essential posts you should read:

  • Revisiting past predictions – 2009
  • The essence of Google’s Success
  • Google Telecom, Hello!
  • Top 9 reasons why the Google Nexus One beats the iPhone
  • The Apple tablet and other industry disruptions signed Apple
  • Clash of the Titans – Google vs Apple in 2010 and beyond. That one was a whole two weeks before the nice BusinessWeek article.
  • And more predictions from me are here:

  • Technologies to watch for us 2010 and this decade
  • 10 Science, Business and Technology Predictions for the next decade 2010-2019
  • Predictions discussion

    a. Google

    After the presentation of my prediction, Duncan Stewart said “You nailed it. I think for everything, you nailed it. But I don’t agree with one thing”.

    And that was about how in the US, people are very used to a certain level of customer service. He does have a point, especially judging by the flood of questions and complaints regarding an issue with continuous switching between Edge and 3G networks. This got the Google-T-Mobile-HTC trinity passing a hot potato around for a while.

    Personally, I think it’s just growing pains for Google, but the bases of the innovative disruption are already there and the consumer will like that.

    Check out this very insightful text by Jon Stokes on Ars Technica where he describes how selling the handset unlocked and separately from the carrier changes the competitive landscape:

    Because AT&T has ensnared—and locked in—legions of consumers with the iPhone, the company’s incentive is to minimize their infrastructure spending so that they can maximize per-user profits. AT&T also has a motive to nickel-and-dime you to death, because it has you locked in with that amazing phone and its accompanying ETF.

    b. Twitter

    Asked by Michelle Blanc about what his thoughts on Twitter and its positive role in the aftermath of the Haiti disaster were, Duncan turned out not to be such a big fan of Twitter after all.

    Here is what I think Duncan should do to do to get more out of Twitter:

    1. Use TweetDeck (my favourite) or Seesmic (using it on Android since TweetDeck is not available and it’s very good indeed) to separate different streams into columns: “All Friends”, “Direct Messages”, “Mentions”. In TweetDeck, you can also add your Facebook column.

    2. If you like Finance, Trading and Investments,
    – register for StockTwits
    – download the Nasdaq QFolio app for the iPhone in the App store and follow what people are saying on StockTwits for each ticker.

    3. Follow people of interest, those with expertise and breaking news, through search or pre-existing lists on other people’s profiles or on TweetDeck’s homepage. e.g. Follow @howardlinzon, and @fredwilson

    Here is why I think Twitter is important:

    1. Nasdaq has built an iPhone app which leverages StockTwits, which itself leverages Twitter. I bet this is going to be important for algorithmic trading.

    2. Twitter has made deals with Google and Microsoft to the tune of $25M so that their realtime search results appear in the two giants’ traditional search engines

    3. Twitter has an ecosystem of 50,000 apps, and growing. It has become a platform where people use it for marketing and finance. This is crucial and there area many other details in my criteria for IPO selection in Two IPOs to look forward to in 2010.

    4. Remember IRC channels during the Iraq war? Twitter plays that role today, and much more. Breakout news happens there first, and much later on other channels.

    5. I was spending some night in New York and at one point in time there were insistent traffic of fire-trucks and I thought “This is not the city that never sleeps – it’s rather the city where you can never sleep”. My first reflex? Checking #NYC on Twitter to see if there was any danger in the vicinity. Similarly, Twitter will become essential for alerting you to any opportunities in your surroundings. That’s part of the power of real-time and location-based services.

    6. Twitter allows you to do social computing. Your trusted friends and contacts will help when you have a genuine question and if you are helpful too.

    7. Last but not least… Dell made $6.5M through Twitter channels sales in two years.

    Solar

    I was a bit disappointed to hear that solar would have some difficulties along the 2010 because of a supply glut. However, stumbling blocks can turn into stepping stones – this may be an opportunity to regularly stock up on the equities, value-averaging along the way until the big break provided the choice is made carefully.

    How Deloitte leveraged Social Media for TMT Predictions 2010

    Deloitte did very well in leveraging Social Media prior and up to the event. First, they decided to open up submissions from the public, leveraging user-generated content.

    They further leveraged several social media applications, services and strategies and Katheline Jean-Pierre has been a driving force behind that, and I actually learned about the MyTMT prediction through her Facebook and Twitter feeds.

    Deloitte was present on the Web, on Twitter, and on Facebook, together with UStream, YouTube etc…

    Deloitte called upon Laurent Maisonnave of ZeAgence to build upon his social media and video streaming skills – the event was filmed and streamed to Deloitte’s UStream channel in realtime over the web.

    They leveraged the Wildfire application for Facebook, which allows campaign management. Any participant could upload their videos and then invite their Facebook friends to vote through the Wildfire app embedded in Deloitte’s MyTMT web page.

    Before and during the event, Deloitte had communicated and prominently displayed its hashtag for the event (#TMTPrediction2010 or #TMTPred2010) for others to include in their Tweets.

    This morning, I was also flabbergasted to learn that my prediction was shown to 400 Business people at the event in Toronto.

    Actually, it will also be shown throughout Canada during Deloitte’s stops in major cities during their TMT Prediction events. I believe they are:
    Winnipeg, Quebec, Ottawa, Calgary, Halifax and Vancouver.

    Thanks Deloitte for this opportunity and kudos to the team, Duncan, Robert, Peter, Katheline, Laurent and the Jury members.

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    More details have emerged about Google’s Nexus One phone and their plans for Telecommunications.

    CNET broke some news about leaked phone prices:

  • $530 unlocked directly from Google at http://www.google/phone
  • $180 subsidized with a 2-year contract from T-Mobile.
  • Google invited people for an Android event for January 5th, 2010, where the availability of the phone will most probably be announced early in the morning.

    eWeek has an article with Bradley Horowitz, Vice President of Product Management at Google, speaking about some of Google’s vision for Telecommunication.

    A Google executive said the company has only scratched the surface of what it plans to do with Google Voice, the phone management application that lets users route calls to all of their phones from one unique number.

    Google in November acquired Gizmo5, a maker of so-called softphone software that will enable Google Voice to operate like Skype by letting users place calls via the Web from one PC to another or from a PC to a landline or mobile phone.

    Bradley Horowitz, vice president of product management, declined to outline specifics for how Google is implementing Gizmo5 with Google Voice. However, Horowitz, who joined Google from Yahoo almost two years ago and oversees Gmail, Google Docs, Picasa and other Google Apps, was very enthusiastic about the move and Google Voice on the whole in a recent interview with eWEEK:

    “What we’re trying to do with telephony is give people a seamless experience that frees up their telephony communication from the silos where it’s lived for the last decade. Voicemail, my contacts, all of those things have been segregated from the rest of my Web experience. We have big plans to do a better job.
    Voicemail transcription, inbox integration and threaded SMS are fantastic features, but we’re really just scratching the surface. Gizmo5 gives us talent and talent technology. They have specific tech and skills in further integrating telephony with devices and desktop and Web-based computing. We want to make sure you’re communication is available to you irrespective of where you are at, what device you have in your pocket, etc.”
    Horowitz said Google sees not only the future of communications funneling through the Web, but every computing service for work and play.

    Read more here: Google Has Big Plans for Google Voice, Cloud Computing in 2010

    In addition, in an interview with Ken Auletta, who stayed 13 weeks with the Google team in Silicon Valley, wrote a new book about Google, you can hear this at around 4:18:

    Why can’t we have free phone service?

    In the World of Google, the Engineer is King.

    This is why Google manages to be efficient and also work out inefficiencies in systems and businesses.

    Auletta’s book is called “Googled – The End of the World as We know it”:

    Google will charge for their phone service but it will be heavily subsidized by ads.

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    AppleThe Apple tablet is said to be announced in January 2010 and I believe Apple will be shaking a few industries in one fell swoop. In this post I make a few predictions about the tablet as well as analyze what Apple does well and what they should do.

    Update: the LA Times has an article on how the stock performed:

    Apple stock soars to all-time high

    Amid speculation about a forthcoming tablet computer, the company’s shares have risen 145% this year.

    Apple tablet characteristics

    • It’s going to be a general-purpose multi-tasking computer
    • I think the Apple tablet also support gesture-recognition through the webcam from a distance. You’ll be able to flip pages through just a gesture at a distance, without touching the tablet. There will be other gestures supported
    • There could be some switchable voice recognition and command functions on it too.

    Industries which will be shaken up or disrupted by Apple’s tablet

    1. The Music-making industry

    For the argumentation, see my post in 2007 on how Apple will revolutionize music-making which I wrote before the release of the iPhone.

    The whole experience of how you make music within a sequencer with virtual instruments is about to be revolutionized by Apple with a forthcoming combination of multi-touch hardware and software based on Logic and running on at least Leopard. The very act of recording, manipulating and producing music on a computer will become an organic performance in itself.

    And here is what some people have been doing in the meantime, demonstrated by Jordan Rudess of Dream Theater:

    One thing Apple needs to do here is make the software detect how much pressure or indirectly, pseudo-pressure.

    2. The traditional publishing industry

    Single purpose devices like the Nook, the Kindle will disappear, and people will rather use a fuller computing device like the Apple tablet to read the press, mostly on the web or in other digital formats like Flash and PDF.

    Apple has pitched the publishing industry to move their content online and through their distribution channel so they can be accessed and read on the tablet.

    The split is advantageous to publishers as compared to the amazon Kindle terms, with Apple taking 30% whereas Amazon takes 30% if it is exclusive, and 50% if not.

    3. The Cable/Television industry

    TechCrunch has a good article on it.

    Apple’s strengths here will be:

    • the very high-resolution screen and general great screen quality
    • the excellent movie distribution channel and store through the Apple Store/iTunes combination, but that would necessitate wireless access for it to work anywhere

    4. The Mobile computing industry

    It remains to be seen how good a tablet is for computing on the go, as posture and ergonomics will be different form having a laptop with a keyboard and a separate screen. But the tablet will still be a fantastic portable computing device.

    I am still wondering whether the device will be iPhone O.S. based or built with Snow Leopard. The latter appears primed for use on a tablet, with an adjustable on-screen keyboard. As the more powerful O.S., Apple would do well to use Snow Leopard in the tablet.

    If the tablet uses the iPhone O.S., Apple would win points for making it multi-task out-of-the-box. In addition, Apple would leverage the existing Apple App Store infrastructure.

    What Apple has and has done well

    • The Apple Store
    • iTunes
    • The distribution through the Apple Store, the App Store and iTunes
    • The Design of it all, making the user experience beautiful
    • Genius recommendations for music – this can easily be transposed for Movies and Books
    • Acquisition of Lala, so that content can be streamed easily from the cloud

    What Apple has going against it

    • Does not play well with more readily available formats and codecs, including open-source ones
    • DRM, with machine authorizations

    Machines get obsolete or die and have to be replaced, so why should you be limited to 5 machines where the content you paid for is stored and not be able to easily get all the content you purchased in a new machine? What if my old machines all died?

    • Does not allow sending gifts from one country to another user

    The next decade will pitch Apple against Google on some fronts.

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    These are some of the best Finance, Investment and Trading books in my library.

    Useful for a last-minute gift for yourself or your loved ones.

    Merry Christmas!

    1. Lords of Finance – Liaquat Ahamed

    Liaquat Ahamed won the Financial Times and Goldman Sachs Business Book of the Year Award 2009 for it but it’s about the Great Depression and the Crash of 1929.

    2. One Up On Wall Street – Peter Lynch

    How to spot the next ten-bagger.

    3. Inside the House of Money – Steven Drobny

    Macro-thinking. Interviews with top Hedge Fund Managers.

    4. The Warren Buffet Way – Hagstrom, Fisher, Miller

    Essentials of Value investing according to Buffett, with nods to Fisher & Graham.

    5. The Greatest Trade Ever – Gregory Zuckerman

    How John Paulson cemented his place as one of the greatest traders/hedge fund managers ever.

    6. Trend Following – Michael Covel

    All types of Trend-following information, including from the cryptic but highly successful Ed Seykota.

    7. Way of the Turtle – Curtis Faith

    Are traders born or bred? This question led to an experiment which is documented here. Hugely interesting.

    8. Trade your way to financial freedom – Van Tharp

    Describes criteria for a complete trading plan. Also speaks about Psychology.

    9. Come into my trading room – Dr. Alexander Elder

    Complete trading plan, with examples.

    10. Trading for a living – Alexander Elder

    11. Reminiscences of a stock operator – Edwin Lefèvre

    Life of the legendary Jesse Livermore.

    12. How I made $2,000,000 in the stock market – Nicolas Darvas

    How Darvas, a dancer, approached the stock market from scratch and evolved a mix of fundamental and technical perspectives. Highly entertaining and educational.

    13. Quantitative Trading – Ernie Chan

    14. Generate Thousands in Cash on your Stocks Before Buying or Selling Them – Samir Elias

    15. The Lazy Investor – Derek Foster

    For the long, value and dividend approach with compounding. For investors, not traders.

    16. An American Hedge-Fund – Timothy Sykes

    How Tim made a fortune out of his bar mitzvah money, $12,500 and then proceeded to lose all of it. More importantly, how Tim dusted himself up again to do it one more time starting with the exact same amount of money. This time, however, he’s doing it in the open, documenting winning and losing trades through Covestor. He rules the penny stocks space. Follow him on his blog, on Covestor, on Twitter, Facebook, Livestream, etc… – he’s everywhere.

    17. Investing The Templeton Way – Lauren Templeton, Scott Phillips

    18. Market Wizards – Jack Schwager

    19. Technical Analysis of the Financial Markets – John Murphy

    20. Japanese Candlestick Charting Patterns – Steve Nison

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    Paul Kedrosky of InfectiousGreed wrote a very revealing guest article on TechCrunch about strange rounds of financing into non public companies, mentioning Twitter & Yelp.

    This got me thinking about which IPO I would look forward to myself and what the characteristics of the company would be, including the state of its technology.

    What I am looking for is

    1. Not just a technology or feature, but something which matured into a platform

    2. Something which is near ubiquitous at the turn of 2009 on the web or in the circle of geeks and people living on the edge, the innovators and early adopters who try things or grasp things early, the visionaries.

    3. Something which already has significant inroads in the platform space with high-profile or low profile companies or associations using their service or building upon them.

    4. Something which can already be useful in:

    • Customer Relationship for enterprises
    • Targeted Marketing or targeted advertising for enterprises or startups
    • Behavioral Analytics, or just Analytics
    • The Finance industry – Automated & Algorithmic trading

    Today, Erick Schonfeld followed through with an article on the Top 10 IPO Candidates for 2010, but strangely omits Twitter, which Kedrosky mentioned.

    As I wrote in this post about Twitter raising 35M USD from Google and Microsoft, Twitter has become a platform and checks all four points on the checklist above.

    If they are not acquired, the two Technology companies whose IPOs I am looking forward to are:

    Facebook

    Facebook

    and

    Twitter

    Twitter

    For a contrarian view on none other than Forbes, read The Death of the IPO by Quentin Hardy.

    I think many people underestimate the value of Twitter.

    If Twitter has an IPO, would you buy it?

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    Bloomberg reported that Twitter inked two deals for a total of 25M USD with Google and Microsoft so that tweets can be inserted in their search results page.

    This shows how essential real-time has become on the Web.

    For me it’s a big win for the underlying open source technology framework for Rapid Web Development, Ruby on Rails, which I have been recommending to enterprises since about 4 years ago.

    Where are you on the Technology Adoption Lifecycle below regarding Ruby and Ruby on Rails? Have you innovated? Are you an early adopter because you understand the business implications, or will you be at the other end of the spectrum, a laggard?

    Technology Adoption Lifecycle

    Technology Adoption Lifecycle

    The news is, however, huge for Twitter, which is said by Bloomberg to be profitable now.

    Twitter has become a platform essential to the Web in Marketing/Advertising, Customer Care (though less as people understand this less) but also in Finance. Witness Howard Linzon’s StockTwits, itself leveraged by NASDAQ’s Portfolio Manager application for the iPhone.

    It’s huge news because the real-time web can be input signals into high-frequency trading strategies.

    If Twitter does an IPO, I won’t miss it.

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    Intel’s graphics chip

    Intel (INTC) had planned to launch a GPGPU chip codenamed Larrabee, but ended up back-pedalling. The plan was to leverage the existing Intel x86 processor architecture in a double-core configuration.

    On Bloggingstocks, the problem seems to be “product quality issues during the development stage“.

    I think it’s rather because a CPU and a GPU are two very different beasts, which prompted AMD to buy ATI rather than to rely on their existing knowledge, platform, architecture and technology.

    Case in point: the appearance of Apple’s OpenCL technologies which leverage both multiple processors and Graphics Processing Units for computing.

    Check out this short video in 2008 from the NVDIA CEO about Larrabee.

    NVDIA and AMD surged on the news. I believe somebody did very well at AMD in 2006 by deciding to acquire ATI.

    All this makes yesterday’s post and especially the StreetInsider article on why Intel should buy ARMH that much more prescient.

    AMD appears to be a good hedge for INTC holders.

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    Apple buys Lala, will offer streaming music service.

    The latest news is that Apple is buying Lala, and the streaming music service will most probably be integrated into iTunes.

    On Friday, AAPL was down 3%, most probably on the news of litigation by Opti and Emblaze. However, seeing that the company has done well in retail performance in October, there will be more halo effects around the sales of iPods, iPod Touch and iPhones, iMac and other products going forward into 2010.

    Intel vs ARM

    There’s an interesting article over at The Street about why Intel (INTC) should consider buying ARM Holdings (ARMH) as the latter dominates the smartphone chip space despite Intel’s Atom offerings. ARMH has a bunch of big names in the list of current and former licensees of its technology which is found in Apple’s iPhones, among other smartphones.

    Marvell (MRVL), one of these licensees, was up this past week on beating analyst’s estimates.

    Also remember that ARM has a very long list of current and former licensees: Alcatel(ALU Quote), Atmel(ATML Quote), Broadcom(BRCM Quote), Cirrus Logic(CRUS Quote), Digital Equipment Corp., Freescale, Intel (through DEC), LG Group, Marvell Technology Group(MRVL Quote), NEC, NVIDIA(NVDA Quote), NXP (previously Philips), Oki, Qualcomm(QCOM Quote), Samsung, Sharp, ST Microelectronics(STM Quote), Symbios Logic,Texas Instruments(TXN Quote),VLSI Technology, Yamaha, ZiiLABS and, oh yes, Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing(TSM Quote). – Robert Castellano – The Street.

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    Trading horizon

    I nearly covered a shorting position with a limit today but cancelled it. The day was good and my portfolio is up 53.7%. One of the short positions is now top on the list in terms of dollar gain, though not percentage gain.

    Shorting and trading, by their very nature are shorter-term positions as compared to investments. It is quite difficult to be able to hold on to a shorting position for a few days. For some traders it can be a nerve-wracking experience, especially if the threat of a short squeeze looms, where the potential for losses is unlimited. Therefore, level-headedness is of the essence.

    The trade must be well-researched, and requisites for a good trade must be fulfilled: entry, exit, % of bankroll risked, stops or limits.

    I believe you should forget about a short trade which was profitable when covered in the following sense: “You should have no regret about any other action which could have brought more profits.”

    This said, it is important to have a trading journal where trades can be stored and analyzed.

    Value Investing

    Buy-and-hold and regular investing with DRIP can bring some peace of mind to the Trader/Investor, but in some market conditions it can be much more nerve-wracking than holding on a short.

    Consider Buffett seeing his portfolio literally melt by $25 billion during the global economic crisis and still keeping at it. There is simply no way that he could not be affected by this stupendous loss unless he really doesn’t look at his portfolio at all.

    In addition, it was possible as I showed in this blog to call the massive losses in the market months before October 2008. With such a large exposure to market and systemic risk, one could have cashed in, or done like Paulson and make the Greatest Trade Ever – as it is, the title of a new book by Gregory Zuckerman:

    Trend-following

    My thoughts on trend-following are related to the amplification effect of people using this strategy. Moreover, these strategies can also be set and triggered in an automated way.

    With the tendency to go more towards automation, thus removing the deleterious effects of human emotions on trading, I can only foresee that similar strategies and systems will cause charts to spike one way or the other, with the amplitudes getting higher with time.

    It would be interesting to model these changes, and build meta-strategies to profit from these trends.

    A book I recommend on Trend Following is the one by Michael Covel:

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    Although the day was thrilling, last night’s post-market reaction to a lawsuit filed against NetList brought the stock down much more than during the day.

    I could see this on Google Finance, which shows the day price, and right underneath it the post-market trading price, as opposed to Yahoo Finance, which shows the post-market information below the chart.

    Netlist was therefore down during the day about %7, and and additional -25% between 7-8 p.m. Tim Sykes has an extensive report about the company on his blog, coming from his newly launched PUMP research service where he describes how the litigation risk for this company was predicted two weeks ago by his team. Quite impressive.

    Which brought me to do a quick comparison of three trading styles a year after I started:

    • Value investing. Or in my case, just being long on certain equities as I haven’t yet done any extensive fundamental analysis. I still hedged any stock position with Gold and Silver.
    • Regular investing with DRIP (Dividend Re-investment Plan)
    • Penny-stocking

    The penny-stocking result on just two short positions these past two weeks have contributed sufficiently to my trading account for the importance of this trading style to re-affirmed in my view. They contributed to 27% of my trading account (Value investing + Penny-stocking – DRIP), which means the rate of return is quite high indeed.

    My portfolio is up 50%.

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    Dubai default threat

    The news about Dubai, namely that Dubai World has asked to postponed debt payment, has rippled through to the US stock market already. This comes at a time where the US markets are taking some time out for Thanksgiving. Markets were closed on Thursday, but the half-day trading on Friday offered a glimpse of red.

    European banks like RBS and HSBC are the most exposed to the Dubai debt, but the fear of repercussions worldwide and especially in the US has created yet another setback this Friday, with some saying it is a well-deserved market correction. Stocks were all in the red. By resonance, the financial sector was impacted. I think this could make for some opportunities to buy longer-term investments.

    Chinese stock – Origin Agritech (SEED)

    Tim Sykes, who is a most astonishing new figure in trading and who is up > 650% since November 2007 actually made one of his worst trades this past week on Origin Agritech (SEED). It so happens that I am long on this stock since a few months ago. I was battered by my choices of Chinese stocks and gradually discarded them except this one.

    This past week, on the announcement that SEED had received government approval for a new GMO product, the equity price was sent soaring, much to my delight. Whether this trend upwards can be sustained remains to be seen. I am tempted to cash in the profits and re-balance my portfolio which has help up about +30% monthly since October 2008 – yes, probably the worst time to invest in the US markets ever. My investment pool was a learning budget, so for me it could go to zero without any material cost to me as it’s normal to pay for education.

    The thing is, before the economic meltdown in October 2008, SEED was not a penny stock. This raises the question as to whether Tim’s strategy for penny-stocking has to take into account the market conditions and the company’s bull market price history too.

    On Trading Style

    Ideally, I wanted to be able to explore all types of trading and investment styles, like being long on value stocks, à la Buffett, or trading the trend and shorter-term à la Turtle or à la Tim Sykes. However, I found that it is not easy to juggle the very different required mindsets. For one, although after research I was convinced that the Chinese stocks I had invested in were good long-term (FEED, GRO, PUDC), I felt on edge seeing that they were not yielding their promises yet and had to divest.

    This probably means that I’m more interested in shorter-term profits. Yet I am not a day-trader. It is probable that a good time-frame for me is from a few days (e.g. when I’m shorting and more on this below) and a few months.

    DRIPs

    On the other hand, I also recently received a huge envelope in the mail. It was actually a number of shares in the previous company I worked at, in the Finance sector. Never mind that the boss of this department serving the financial sector (including big and institutional firms like Bank of America, PNC financials, New York Mellon), was utterly clueless when it comes to the fundamentals in the very industry he was (and probably still is) working in and that he couldn’t see the meltdown coming until way past the Lehman collapse whereas I called it before March 2008.

    The company was paying up to half my share purchase from my salary, and I had devoted the maximum percentage allowed, which if I remember correctly was 20%. This was in an automatic dividend reinvestment account. In the meantime, the stock was up from 9ish to 13ish on the economic recovery and some positive news (the company in question is really good at pumping out PRs, but is also soundly managed financially). The regularly investment and re-investment now amounts to a hefty non-taxable sum.

    Hence, the notion of regular investment with a DRIP (Dividend Re-Investment Plan) is immensely interesting: the power of compound interest – Buffet built his fortune on it. But more important, I have seen what it does, with a hard, tangible year-long investment and its current valuation.

    Netlist (NLST)

    Speaking of shorting, through Tim Sykes I heard of Netlist, a company selling memory modules called HyperCloud. This stock has shot up in a few days and this time it has no history of anything else than a penny stock. Therefore, I expect this to crash. It didn’t want to last week, but Dubai made it crack a little. It’s probably always a good thing to wait for any short squeezes to play out before sending a short order.

    The “USD-USD market” strong coupling

    Everything in the US markets goes this way these days: Markets are up as the USD is down, Markets are down as the USD is up. There seems to be a strong correlation or coupling as some analysts and pundits are saying. However, this view strikes me as odd if not downright silly as the valuation itself is in a declining currency as all FIAT currencies are bound to devaluate.

    Maybe my USD earnings on my portfolio are not that good after all and it’s the right time to invest in those Canadian Dividend Aristocrats.

    We will have to wait till tomorrow to see how the Dubai effect plays out.

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    If you had a computer with a world-wide model spanning much of civilized history and which predicts significant Economic/Political turning points to the day, what would you do as an investor?

    The date, it turns out, will be April 19th or April 20th. The host at the ContraHour blog reveals he is watching the USD rather than the broad stock market whereas I had interpreted it as a ‘Get-out-of-stocks’ signal. This is significant to me amongst the talks of a Global Currency before and after the G20 summit. Besides, I am convinced myself the dollar will crash. Or it could be a massive event stemming from Quant funds deleveraging as they are taken aback by the recent rally when the fundamentals are still very bad. Here’s another similar view from Business Insider.

    I wrote about Martin Armstrong and his flabbergasting model in this post on YashLabs – A Global Economic Crisis – New models for investments

    In short, Armstrong has detected a historical cycle for major events based on Pi. What else could be anyway, right? A cycle – circle – cyclical – circular – it can only be a model incorporating Pi if it’s regular. In his model, there’s also a time-frame for the collapse of whole political or societal structures, and that would coincide with the collapse of the U.S.A. around next year or in two years.

    Read Martin Armstrong’s latest at ContraHour, Why models are our only hope – should we create a model to manage our social-economy?

    In it, he recounts in additional detail how his Judge (Armstrong writes from jail) seemingly accuses him of inspiring himself from the movie Pi by Aronosky, when it fact, the movie is based on Armstrong himself.

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    On PBS today, is a new installment of FrontLine, “Ten trillion and Counting” about the surging amount of debt incurred by the USA. This amounts of to 70% of the GDP.

    “Who does the Government borrow its money from?”

    Part of the debt is owed by the Government which borrows the Fiat currency USD from the Federal Reserve. In turn, the Government must repay the Federal Reserve with interest. The interest, of course is repayable in Federal Reserve issued Fiat money. Therefore, it is inevitable that the currency be devalued as more and more is rushed in to the economy. Devaluation of Fiat Currency is equivalent to inflation.

    The number of billions raised for countering the current crises put America in deeper holes than ever. The Interest on all this debt also runs high.

    Another interesting documentary to watch first on the same subject is I.O.U.S.A. In this documentary, the trade deficit as mentioned by Warren Buffett in “Thriftville vs Squanderville” is added to the debt, bringing it to staggering figures, signaling a possibility of a Bankrupt America – if that’s not already the case, with the mass media offering a veil of double-speak and politically correct terminology.

    In I.O.U.S.A., watch how people have no idea from who the Government borrows money. The Fed is Federal in name only. It is a semi-private body which through the mechanism of Fiat currency and interest, brings the total destruction of the value of the currency and also ultimately, the transfer of ownership of a nation.

    Watch, and learn, as it could happen to you, anywhere. The only thing Americans could have done to try and solve the issue was to vote for Ron Paul. Instead – you now the story – an unknown a few years ago, all hyped-up by the mass media, financed by the same people who participated in the crisis in the first place, is brought to a leading position. Once in office, the same issues go on, undeterred. More billions borrowed, tightening the noose of debt on Americans and the next generations.

    Here is I.O.U.S.A:

    And here is the PBS Frontline documentary, published today:

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    It’s been a year since I first wrote in the Title of a blog post here on YashLabs, “America’s collapsing economy” and earlier than that since I first saw where this was going.

    Of course, I was standing on the shoulders of Giants: Aaron Russo, Ron Paul, Peter Schiff, Nouriel Roubini, Ludwig von Mises, Murray N. Rothbard, Meredith Whitney.

    Some recent quotes by Gurus and authorities are ominous:

    1. The models and people using them were wrong

    A new model of how markets work must be evolved from now on, using the internet as a preferred tool for analyzing the collective behavior which makes Mr. Market’s mood swings. The model must incorporate economic fundamentals as well as shorter-term drivers, together with an engine to detect and implement a radical investment technique switch or regime switch.

    2. Regime switching must come into play

    Value investing or buy and hold does not work in such a drastic crashing market with a synchronized global downturn.

    When sentiment goes down, Mr. Market becomes irrational, fear-driven, and rumor and news-driven.

    I can affirm this because I have tested this myself for more than a year:

    – From February 2008 till September 2008 in a virtual environment where news-driven trades made the portfolio gain 36.5% (from -7 to 29.5) in just 8 days – from the 16th of September to the 23rd of September. All these trades were documented right here on this blog and the history can be seen on the portfolio site at UpDown.com.

    Since then, I haven’t even bothered with the virtual portfolio, but considering the disastrous performance of many Hedge Funds, Funds of Hedge Funds, other funds, at the point I left it, between 16-30%, the performance was stellar.

    - From October 2008 (one of the worst month ever to invest in and where my performance was 30%) to date 2009 with real money. Here as well, I have been mostly on the positive side.

    If you think that’s good, see what Timothy Sykes did with his decisions: since November 2007, he’s up around 250%.

    3. Some things about the nature of money are still left unsaid

    How is it that despite the political ‘change’, more billions are still borrowed with interest by the Government from the Federal Reserve (which does not belong to the people)?

    It is because people do not understand the fundamentals of currency. In this system, to pay the interest, more money has to be printed. Since this Fiat currency is not indexed on any precious metals, the massive injection of it into the system is bound to cause its devaluation.

    The future probably holds a new currency indexed on precious metals. All Fiat currencies are bound for destruction at one point or another.

    4. It is time to rethink your values

    By using ethics, sustainable development and spiritual values, and putting Mankind before money, you will be in a better way to move forward.

    5. A get-out-of-stock signal – Martin Armstrong

    I have been interested in Fibonacci sequences, Elliott Waves and Kondratieff’s cycles, but one man’s model beats them all. His model predicts events to the date, and by his texts, something is supposed to happen on the 19th of April 2009. The computer and software supposedly self-destructed itself on purpose when stolen from him.

    The man’s story is as flabbergasting as his model’s results. Reading the following essay, I thought of the movie Pi by Darren Aronofsky. It turns out the Judge accused Armstrong of inspiring himself from the movie when the latter was actually inspired from his own life.

    Writing from a prison cell on a typewriter, Martin Armstrong says about America’s finance woes and collapsing economy that “It’s just time” (pdf download).

    Read it, it’s fantastic. It also says to get out of markets.

    Contra-Hour also hosts Armstrong’s newest: “Is it time to turn out the lights”

    Perhaps the cycle of American politics has come to its end as predicted by Armstrong’s model?

    Who knows? After a while – it might just be time to pull a John Templeton on the US and the World.

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    From local to global – this is in essence what has happened over the past few months, which have been gripping. I was watching testimonies on C-Span.org, sometimes simultaneously chatting with my sister though Skype as she’s based in London watching the same.

    I got my simulated portfolio into a real one in the meantime with Questrade, trying Forex as well as stocks. My October performance was about 30%, I has a simple 4-stock portfolio, 2 companies, hedged with two ETFs : GLD and SLV, tracking gold and silver respectively. Meanwhile, most Hedge Funds seemed not to be hedging at all.

    Roubini and Schiff, mentioned a long time ago here on YashLabs, since then have been everywhere on T.V. for their cutting commentaries. Nicholas Nassim Taleb has also been present and there’s a seminal video with Taleb and Roubini, and Taleb saying that the new Government should have appointed someone like Roubini to help.

    This is not what Obama did, did he? This is why the US is going to be under severe distress for longer, maybe much longer. The only man who would have done something concrete, is Dr. Ron Paul. He understands the essence of the Austrian School of Economics, and is well read in Ludwig Von Mises and Murray N. Rothbard. Barack Obama is a good man, but when it comes to the fundamentals of Economics, he is clueless, otherwise he would have asked Ron Paul, Peter Schiff or Nouriel Roubini for help. I wasn’t really cheering on his election and I was mocked by friends but this is why. And now that he is in place, another massive debt is taken from the Federal Reserve with the newest bailout, tightening the noose of debt around the average American person.

    “The dollar will crash.” – Yash.

    There is so much more to write, but instead, I now want to watch the show “Inside the Meltdown” broadcasted on PBS yesterday.

    Here it is:

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