Click Here to see more reviews about: Case Problems In Finance (Hardcover)
Showing posts with label Business / Economics. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Business / Economics. Show all posts
3/14/2010
Review of Case Problems In Finance (Hardcover)
Click Here to see more reviews about: Case Problems In Finance (Hardcover)
2/28/2010
Review of Bull's Eye Investing: Targeting Real Returns in a Smoke and Mirrors Market (Hardcover)
SYNOPSIS.In the first half of the book, Mauldin sets out to prove that in ten years' time the US stock market will likely be no higher than it is now, and possibly significantly lower.The stock market's future level will be determined by (a) earnings growth and (b) the value the market places on those earnings (ie. P/E ratios), so Mauldin focuses on these two elements. First, he argues that earnings growth will be disappointing.Companies' earnings will be depressed by the adoption of stricter accounting standards, the expensing of options, and higher pension costs. Combine that with anemic economic growth due to the aging of the population, the current account deficit and the budget deficit, and earnings are unlikely to exceed their historical growth rate of under 6%. Next, Mauldin argues that P/E ratios are unlikely to rise over the coming decade, and may in fact fall dramatically.He assembles a battery of arguments to prove his case.Secular bull markets have never started from times when the market's P/E ratio was as high as it is today.The market is currently overvalued according to multiple measures, and will likely revert to its historical mean.The risk premium is currently low, and a recovery to more sensible levels would depress P/E ratios.Finally, P/E ratios fall as inflation rises or an economy slips into deflation; so given the US economy's current inflation rate (close to zero), there's nowhere to go that would result in a higher P/E ratio for the market.With mediocre earnings growth and falling P/E ratios, the market is therefore headed nowhere or a lot lower.
If the market will be flat or down over the next decade, how should you invest?That's the subject of the second half of the book.Mauldin recommends that you buy value stocks or a mutual fund run by a value-oriented manager, since value stocks have historically outperformed growth stocks. Stocks that pay dividends are particularly attractive, as a large part of the total return from the stock market has come from dividends.You should also assemble a laddered bond portfolio, buy real estate, and buy gold or gold stocks if you have the expertise.His key recommendation, however, is that you should put your money into hedge funds, since hedge fund results are not dependent on the market rising.
HOW CONVINCING IS HE? Mauldin supports his argument that the stock market will stagnate over the next decade with data, academic studies and a reasonable description and rebuttal of opposing viewpoints.He comes unstuck, however, with the practical recommendations in the second half of the book.Three quick examples:(1) The first half of the book suggests there's a reasonable likelihood of deflation.In that case, cash would be a better investment than most of Mauldin's recommendations.(2) If the stock market is really heading down, as Mauldin suggests with his assertion that the market's P/E ratio could go to 10 or below, the best strategy for most investors is simply to buy long-term index put options; but he doesn't mention this.(3) Hedge funds have lousy tax efficiency, so returns for taxable investors would be a lot worse than Mauldin seems to suggest. These points deserve more discussion than this space allows, so I'll address them in more detail (and provide practical alternatives) on the TechUncovered web site. Suffice it to say that despite his honesty, Mauldin's viewpoint is likely skewed by his profession: acting as an introducing broker to hedge funds.
SHOULD YOU BUY THE BOOK? Despite these criticisms, Mauldin asks important questions and assembles and summarizes a lot of material.But here's the problem.Much of the content has been reproduced from Mauldin's free emails, which are available on his web site, and some of the key arguments are available for free elsewhere, such as Grantham's letters and Bogle's speeches.(I've provided links to these sources on the Market Resource Page on the Seeking Alpha web site.) Worse, unlike the emails, the book has been poorly edited.A couple of the chapters are co-written with a colleague, and read like stand-alone hedge-fund marketing material, while others repeat points in earlier chapters.So the book misses the opportunity to integrate the content of the emails into a readable, methodical argument. Whether you decide on the email archiveor the book, though, Mauldin is definitely worth reading.
Click Here to see more reviews about: Bull's Eye Investing: Targeting Real Returns in a Smoke and Mirrors Market (Hardcover)
1/27/2010
Review of Credit Derivatives: Application, Pricing, and Risk Management (Hardcover)
with ease and grace. Haven't found a so easy read.
Liked mostly the applicaton chapter 4. The pricing chapter 5 is also easy to follow. The Merton extensions could have used more meat (too much math).
Click Here to see more reviews about: Credit Derivatives: Application, Pricing, and Risk Management (Hardcover)
12/23/2009
Review of A World of Wealth: How Capitalism Turns Profits into Progress (Hardcover)
Tom Donlan has done an exceptionally good job of describing the capitalist system and its operation in terms that are, at one and the same time, sufficiently sophisticated to attract specialists, yet intelligible to a much broader public.Mr. Donlan's viewpoint is very obvious; he's "pro-capitalism" and not ashamed to say so, yet he does not beat you over the head with it.When discussing climate change, for example, he presents Vice President Gore's viewpoint and his own, but without the overly-emotionally, anti-intellectual verbiage so common these days from both sides of this issue.Rather, he discusses what Gore's conclusions may mean in terms of the capitalist system's response.As he says, "Global warming is not just an environmental problem; it is also an economic problem."Donlan rightly emphasizes a subject that will become increasingly important as we move from debate to action.
"A World of Wealth" is not a polemic so much as it is a patient and intelligent explanation of a system that most of us think we understand, but few of us can explain in any detail.By focusing on how capitalism and free markets work in a straightforward manner, Donlan brings us back to the basics of the system that has provided is with so much wealth to enjoy and to squander.His emotional commitment to capitalism is clear, but it is his plain-spoken analysis that makes this book worth reading by anyone, socialists included.
I enjoy reading books on finance and economics.Books like Mohamed el-Erian's "When Markets Collide," Nicholas Taleb's "Fooled by Randomness," and Robert Shiller's "Irrational Exuberance" inform me and provide deeper insight into important ideas and trends.But I would liken Thomas Donlan's "A World of Wealth" to Fareed Zakaria's "The Post-American World".They stand in a somewhat different class.They are intelligent, thought-provoking, and deal with very important topics, yet they are also eminently readable and understandable by anyone with a decent education, regardless of their technical training.This should be no surprise.Both Zakaria (formerly editor of Foreign Affairs and currently editor of Newsweek International) and Donlan are professional journalists and both have many years of editorial experience for publications that demand excellence.They know how to communicate their thoughts clearly and succinctly on topics of great importance.That is worth the price of a book like "A World of Wealth" in itself.
Click Here to see more reviews about: A World of Wealth: How Capitalism Turns Profits into Progress (Hardcover)
10/20/2009
Review of Cash In On Cash Flow: How to Make Full-Time Income with Part-Time Effort in America's Hottest New Business (Hardcover)
Click Here to see more reviews about: Cash In On Cash Flow: How to Make Full-Time Income with Part-Time Effort in America's Hottest New Business (Hardcover)
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