March 24, 2013....Bob Brinker's Moneytalk Summary: Part One  (comments welcome)
STOCK MARKET: Caller Dave from Illinois asked Brinker if the Federal 
Reserve pumping money into the economy was driving the stock market 
going up.
Honey EC: Brinker gave a long answer to Dave's question that includes a lot of other information about what the Fed is doing,  it's affect on money supply, inflation, interest rates, unemployment and the stock market:  
Brinker
 replied: "It's called Quantitative Easing....The Federal Reserve is 
buying under the current round, which is technically, the fourth 
rounds....is purchasing $85 billion a month in U.S. Treasury and Mortgage-Back Securities.....And
 that put the money into circulation....No question that has flooded the
 market with money...And that is one main reason that rates are so low 
is there's money everywhere....Why did they do it? They started to do it
 in 2008 to avoid a collapse of the banking system." 
Brinker continued: "Why have they 
continued to do it?  They operate under a congressional order that says 
they have to maximize employment while maintaining the stability of the 
dollar. Now that's measured in inflation terms.....That's defined right 
now as Core Inflation of less than 2% as measured  by the Personal 
Consumption Expenditure Index. And that's where inflation is.  It's 1 
and a fraction using that Core Index. Therefore they're trying to create
 conditions favorable for job creation to get down the unemployment rate
 which is way to high at 7.7%. They want to get it down to 6.5% or 
less.....That money is out there in the financial system. Does some 
of that money find its way into the stock market? Of course it does. 
That's one of the reasons you're looking at record or near record prices
 on major stock indexes. Because of the fact that there has been so much
 liquidity created under this monetary policy."
Model Portfolio I and Akre
 Focus Retail Fund (AKREX).....Caller Dan from Illinois told Brinker 
that he tried to buy AKREX to go in model portfolio I, and found that the fund
 was closed.  Brinker replied: "That is not true. For anybody listening 
to Dan and mislead by Dan's observations, that is not true."
Honey
 EC: I have not checked whether or not AKREX is closed, but I'm sure Brinker would know if it was......In January 2012, Brinker sold the 15% Baron Partner (BPTRX)  
holdings and bought AKRE in portfolio I -- as he indicated to the 
caller. All three of the model portfolios contain small holdings in AKRE. 
GOLD NOT IN MODEL PORTFOLIOS....Caller Dan okay and asked about buying gold. Brinker replied: 
"Whether or not you wish to have a hedge in something like gold bullion,
 which you can easily do through the Exchange-Traded Fund, 
GLD....depends on whether you personally choose to have it. Now I have 
not chosen to have it. Consequently, we don't even have it in our model 
portfolios. But we do have GLD on our list of Exchange Traded Funds. As a
 consequence anybody who  wishes to have a hedge in that fund, can do 
it. The reality is, it hasn't been doing very well. GLD has really been 
doing quite poorly.....It does not pay a dividend....So the only thing 
you have in the fund is price change and price in that fund is down from
 a year ago."
Honey EC: This is the first time that 
Brinker has given any reason whatsoever to explain why he added GLD to 
his off-the-books short list of (all most-well known) ETFs in 2009. The 
list also includes three individual stocks: Suncor, Microsoft and 
Vodafone. 
VANGUARD GINNIE MAE FUND (VFIIX)  
Caller Paul said his parents had all of their money in Ginnie Maes.  
Brinker replied: "We've had a tremendous run with that fund. And that fund 
has done so well. It's had a lot of payouts of distributions in the last
 year and a quarter. If you go back to December 2011, they've paid out 
something in the area of 26 or 27 cents a share. So if you add that to 
the current share price, you'd be at $11.10 a share. The actual price is
 $10.83 because the distributions were paid out to the 
shareholders......Having said that, remember Paul,  in our portfolios, 
we diversify....Although that fund is represented in our portfolios in 
certain places, we don't recommend concentrating all of your money in 
one fund.....If you look in our model portfolio III where a lot of 
retired investments are concentrated for subscribers in retirement or 
approaching retirement, you will see that fund represented there. We 
also have it represented in our income portfolio on page 7, but in all 
cases, we have a widely diversified portfolio." 
Honey EC: I
 strongly question how "well-diversified" the two portfolios are that 
Brinker talked about today. He used to include Vanguard Short-Term 
Investment Grade Fund (VFSTX) and Wellesley Income Fund (VWINX)  in both
 portfolios.  Wellesley is now gone altogether and in its place are 
higher-expense managed fund.  Matter of fact, the only Vanguard Bond 
Fund in the fixed-income portfolio is a 25% weighting in Vanguard Ginnie
 Mae Fund -- even the Vanguard High-Yield Fund is gone.  The other three
 replacement components of that portfolio seem quite a lot more risky to
 me, especially Double Line Total Return (DLNTX)
 and Metro West Total Return (MWTRX). Dodge and Cox Income Fund (DODIX) 
is an old fund and may be more reliable, but is it as diversified? I 
certainly doubt it. 
MONEY SUPPLY....Brinker said: 
"The money supply has gone up hugely over the last few years at record 
historic rates -- because I track it in my investment letter. 
FRIEDMAN AND KEYNES....Brinker said: "I think Milton Friedman, who I was lucky enough to catch in a number of speeches in the Big Apple....is a absolutely brilliant guy.....If there's one topic that people are ignorant about it's John Maynard Keynes. They don't understand what the man stood for.....Keynes
 was adamant about countries building up excess funds in the good times 
so that they would be in a position to stimulate the economy in bad 
times. He was not favor of what the United States has done for decades 
which is running deficits every year in good times and bad....That is 
not Keynesian economics."
BEN BENANKE'S EXIT DOOR 
MAY BE OPEN....Brinker said: "He gave us some hints that the door to his
 exit from the Federal Reserve Chairmanship may be open....He said that 
he has 'spoken to the president' a bit. He says he does not feel 
personal responsibility to stay as Fed Chair as the Fed winds down it 
stimulative monetary policies. In fact he went on to say, 'I don't think
 I'm the only person in the world who can manage the exit.'.....If you 
ask me, during my lifetime, the two Super-Star Fed Chairs, they're Paul 
Volcker and Ben Bernanke. No hesitation at all about saying that...Does 
it matter whether he stays on or not? That's a question that cannot 
be answered because it depends on who replaces him when he leaves. If 
you get somebody as good, then it doesn't matter. If you come up with a 
turkey, then it matters....I'd rather see Bernanke in the chair during 
the withdrawal process, but he's going to do what he's going to do."
 CYPRUS.....Brinker said:  "Cyprus is hanging in the balance as the 
European Bank deadline on the table as we speak to see whether or not 
Cyprus is going to remain in the Euro."
Honey EC: Brinker covered this subject thoroughly last week,
 so I am not going to report much about it today. And clearly, the story
 has changed since last week and has even changed  since Brinker spoke 
about it early in the program. Here is a LINK to a  very good BBC update on the latest news on Cyprus. 
THE NATIONAL DEBT WILL NEVER BE PAID....Brinker said: "I don't think it will ever 
happen.....Anybody that thinks they are going to pay off the national 
debt is dreaming....I don't see a major pay down of the National Debt. 
It's moving up toward 17 Trillion dollars and will cross 17 trillion 
this year.....When it comes to the National Debt, Party affiliation has 
meant very little. We've been running huge deficits in good times and 
bad times."
Honey EC: Hey Bob, maybe you should check 
into what's happened to the National Debt in the past four years and 
compare that to all that went before. It might surprise you. 
THE WEEK AHEAD, Brinker comments:  Housing prices starting to improve. Tuesday Case-Schiller Housing Price Index comes out - median forecast is a year-over-year gain of close to 8%. Last month it was almost 7%.....4th quarter revision expected to be 1/2 of 1% growth. The earlier revision was 0.1%. Total  real GDP growth for 2012 looks like about 2.2%. Year before it was 1.8%....That's slow growth. 
 Initial unemployment  claims estimated at 340,000....Last week they 
were 336,000....They are well under 400,000 and that is where we want to
 see them.
Jeffchristie's Moneytalk Final Exam Question:
Bob
 Brinker once again sang the praises of Ben Bernanke.  He ask if it 
would be a problem if he didn't stay around to unwind the expansion of 
the FED's balance sheet.  He said it would be a problem if his successor
 was a:
A)  A Dodo bird.
B)  A Chicken hawk.
C)  A Turkey.
D)  A Vulture.
Answer 
 Bob Brinker's guest-speaker was Charlie Maxwell. Guest-writer, FrankJ has written a summary of the Maxwell interview. See Part Two article above this one.
San Francisco, Ca. KSFO 560: 1-4pm (KSFO archives Moneytalk Free on Demand for seven days after broadcast. You can download and listen on the go.)  
 
18 comments:
rasputin here: Cyprus? Yeah, kinda' interesting but I don't have any money in Cyprus. You got any money in Cyprus? Si, why are we talking about Cyprus?
A melt-down in Cyprus isn't gonna' do anything to us. Except maybe the Russians will seek a safer haven for their ill-gotten gains.
And now John Maynard Keynes? Oh my.
Oops, Ras....Third time is charm. LOL!
Yes, the entire opening monologue once again about Cyprus.
Now I only understand every other word of this woman caller who somehow has a lot of money at various places in the US...
ras here: Yeah, my computer was acting up a bit. Sorry.
ras here: You mean you can't understand the Chinese gal? Honey, you're just not diverse enough.
(she was hard to listen to.)
Nope, couldn't understand much except she owns houses in Arizona and Texas.
Interesting...Huh?
Oh, and she was calling from San Francisco..."Absentee landlord"???
ras here: Has anyone asked Brinker about the impact of Obamacare on business, employment and the economy in general?
Ras,
I don't recall that subject ever being discussed. Brinker has talked about the increases in high-earner Medicare tax, but to my memory, he hasn't said how he thinks it will affect the economy in general.
Maybe others might remember more.
Honey,
Correct me if I'm wrong, but didn't Mr B
used to compare his portfolios with MSCI broad market index (total market)? I see that he now uses S&P 500 as a benchmark.
Could it be that the 500 has slightly underperformed VTSMX over the years so now his returns look a bit better in comparison? In fact VTSMX last year had a total return of 16.25%, a virtual tie with the 16.4% from portfolio 1 with the 500 lagging at 15.82%.
I think that is called moving the goalposts, however slightly.
That's a very astute observation, Birdbrain!
Indeed, for a very long time, Bob Brinker has used the Total Stock Market Index as his model portfolio benchmark.
Now he is using the S&P 500 Index.
Sarcastically speaking, it was just a tiny adjustment for the sake of making the masses think his portfolios are doing better than they are. Nothing any two-bit shyster wouldn't do....
This is from his website. Note that none of his portfolios beat the Total Stock Market number that you cited:
1 year ended 12-31-2012 for all Model Portfolios:
Portfolio I: 16.4%
Portfolio II: 16.0%
Portfolio III: 12.0% (balanced portfolio of equity and fixed-income securities)
Active/Passive: 16.8%
Vanguard S&P 500 Index Fund: 15.8% (VFINX)
Anon said: "A melt-down in Cyprus isn't gonna' do anything to us. Except maybe the Russians will seek a safer haven for their ill-gotten gains."
Famous last words. It probably won't but it certainly could.
It could be the fatal crack in the century-old fractional reserve banking system, where depositors, who thought their savings were secure, find out that the bank loaned them out. It could easily spread to the weaker European countries and destroying the euro in the process, or force the ECB to massively print euros causing inflation. Neither scenario is good for the fiat dollar.
Bank runs spread like wildfire as people lose confidence in the fraudulent banking system. But of course, according to Bobby, you cannot have bank runs in this country because of FDIC insurance. Haha, right Bobby, more "famous last words."
Cyprus banks were supposed to re-open today, but just before midnight it has been postponed. Cyprus Shutdown into Second Week
Cyprus has given new meaning to the term "bank robbery"! Outright theft, pure and simple.
- Dan G
"Cyprus has given new meaning to the term "bank robbery"! Outright theft, pure and simple."
Why shouldn't the UNINSURED depositor share in the cost of recapitalizing the bank?
If the bank failed, he would lose the uninsured portion of his money anyway. Let him step up to the plate with the shareholders and bondholders.
CashCall
Cash Call: Why should the depositors be forced to pay? They are the only ones in the mix that never agreed to risks like bond and shareholders do.
"Cash Call: Why should the depositors be forced to pay? They are the only ones in the mix that never agreed to risks like bond and shareholders do."
Who cares? Anything above the INSURED portion of their deposit are loans to the bank. As a creditor, they should expect to take a haircut in any recapitalization of the bank.
If they didn't want the risk, they should have stayed within the insured limits.
If they don't agree and the bank fails they will lose the ENTIRE amount of their uninsured deposits.
Take it or leave it.
Cashcall
Cash call: The insurance, as we see, means nothing. If the criminals end up needing more money they will take it even from those who are insured.
If the ECB does not just print up the needed currency, I'm betting that the crooks will raid the deposits to whatever extent they need -- insurance be damned.
People will learn the hard way that government insurance is as fickle as the wind.
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