Slope of Hope Blog Posts

Slope initially began as a blog, so this is where most of the website’s content resides. Here we have tens of thousands of posts dating back over a decade. These are listed in reverse chronological order. Click on any category icon below to see posts tagged with that particular subject, or click on a word in the category cloud on the right side of the screen for more specific choices.

The Revolution Will Not Be Televised (by Gary Tanashian)

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Edit 10/23/11 @ 6:09 AM:  The very first feedback I received on this post was from an intelligent and thoughtful reader who notes that "I don't see you talking at all" in response to my "what the eff are we talking about here?" at the end.  The mailer writes that it is all about conversing, asking questions and challenging the status quo and asks a question of his own about what I was hoping to find, the promised land?  He saw me pointing a finger and poking fun.

So here is my answer:  I wanted to find some of history.  I wanted to find something different.  I wanted to find someone talking about money printing and inflationary disenfranchisement.  That is what the whole Fed shtick was about in the video (I admit the helicopters that flew over the Fed had me thinking about making tin foil hat jokes and got me unfocused).  I did not want to find Kumbaya and bongos.  I suppose I wanted to find something more focused on a message of the '99%' being so many of us stuck in the middle of a triad of the Democrat machinery, the Republican machinery and the Corporate machinery.  With a side of Federal Reserve thrown in for good measure.

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Let’s Look at Occupy’s Demands

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I mentioned at the end of last night's video my disappointment in the "demands" that Occupy Wall Street was making of the world. First off, I've never liked the word "demand" – – it sounds too……demanding. Even as a child, I didn't understand the concept of "Abortion On Demand" that some feminist groups insisted upon, but it sounded like something ugly and brutish.

More importantly, though, is the fact that this list is absurdly long and unrealistic. Let's take a look at these demands of theirs……my comments are in boldface:

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Hedging Against a Dollar Drop

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Chafing at the world's reserve currency

After the excitement of the U.S. debt ceiling negotiations going down to the wire, Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin offered these comments about the U.S. and its dollar:

They are living like parasites off the global economy and their monopoly of the dollar.

[…]

If over there (in America) there is a systemic malfunction, this will affect everyone," Putin told the young Russians. "Countries like Russia and China hold a significant part of their reserves in American securities … There should be other reserve currencies.

With Putin's sentiments in mind, let's look at a way to hedge against a further drop in the dollar

Hedging the dollar

The steps below show how to hedge the dollar by buying optimal puts on the PowerShares DB USD Index (UUP) as a proxy for it. First a quick reminder about what optimal puts mean in this context.

About optimal puts

Optimal puts are the ones that will give you the level of protection you want at the lowest possible cost. As University of Maine finance professor Dr. Robert Strong, CFA has noted, picking the most economical puts can be a complicated task. With Portfolio Armor (available on the web and as an Apple iOS app), you just enter the symbol of the stock or ETF you're looking to hedge, the number of shares you own, and the maximum decline you're willing to risk (your threshold). Then the app uses an algorithm developed by a finance Ph.D to sort through and analyze all of the available puts for your position, scanning for the optimal ones.

A step by step example

Step 1: Enter a ticker symbol

In this case, we're using UUP as a proxy for the dollar we've entered UUP in the Ticker Symbol field below.

Step 2: Enter a number of shares

For the purposes of this example, let's assume an investor has a $1 million portfolio, all in dollar-denominated assets.  So, since we're using UUP as a proxy, the number of shares we'll enter will be $1,000,000 / the most recent share price of UUP ($21.17, as of after hours Monday) = 47,236.7. We've rounded that up to 47,237 and entered that number in the "Shares Owned" field in the screen cap below.

Step 3: Enter a decline threshold

You can enter any percentage you like for a threshold when using Portfolio Armor (the higher the percentage though, the greater the chance you will find optimal puts for your position). I've entered 15% in the "Threshold" field below.

Step 4: Click the red button

A moment after clicking the red button, you'd see the screen cap below, which shows the optimal put option contracts to buy to hedge against a >15% drop in UUP between now and March 16, 2012. The cost of this protection on a $1 million position would be $6,608, or about 0.66% of the position value.1, 2

1Note that, in this case, Portfolio Armor rounded down the number of shares of UUP we entered to the nearest hundred (since one put option contract represents the right to sell one hundred shares of the underlying security), and then presented us with 472 of the put option contracts that would slightly over-hedge the 47,200 shares of UUP they cover, so that the total value of our 47,237 shares of UUP would be protected against a greater-than-15% decline.

2To be conservative, Portfolio Armor quoted that cost based on the ask price of the optimal puts. In practice, an investor can often purchase puts for a lower price, i.e., some price between the bid and the ask.

Post-DC Game Plan

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It may all end tomorrow Or it could go on forever

In which case I'm doomed 

It could go on forever In which case I'm doomed – Piccadilly Palare – Morrissey

It only occurred to me typing the title of my post that the initials for Debt Ceiling are "D.C." Maybe I'm the last one to realize this, but that strikes me as very funny.

I'm typing this six hours before the e-mini markets even open, so I have no earthly idea how ES, NQ, and EUR are going to react to the sorta-kinda news that the debt ceiling crisis is sorta-kinda pretty much over. But my game plan is pretty much:

(a) expect a hearty "PHEW!!" rally, now that the geniuses in D.C. have solved all our problems;

(b) wait for a stall when it slowly begins to dawn on people not only that the economy still sucks, but that the suckiness will probably not be aided by trillions of dollars of government largesse being eliminated from the system, thanks to the new austerity of our nation;

(c) short the holy living hell out of all the most vulnerable issues, grab the popcorn, and watch the fun

Anyway, that's what I'm thinking. It'll be really interesting, to say the least, to see how the markets – and precious metals – react this evening.

0731-pelosi