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Weekend EditionA Trading Tutorial for Retired InvestorsSaturday, July 24, 2010 In any case, you might recall our skepticism that the SEC case against Goldman Sachs would ever amount to much:
It seems clear to me suing Goldman about this issue – a case involving a synthetic CDO that the regulator will probably lose – is simply raising a red herring. Left unexamined is the much larger issue: the extraordinary amount of fraud in mortgage underwriting between 2004 and 2007. – April 21, 2010, Digest
The real fireworks will come in the investigations over CDOs containing bona fide mortgages. These vehicles were completely riddled with fraud and insider dealing. Then, almost half of them were sold to Fannie and Freddie, now owned by Uncle Sam.
When you defraud the sovereign, watch out. We think the fines are going to get a lot bigger...
We also think the amount of fraud in the mortgage security industry means it's unlikely the insurance on these bonds will remain in force. And that means mortgage insurer MBIA may never pay out the $30 billion or so in implied losses. That's a big number for a stock with a current market value of only $1.35 billion and assets of $25 billion.
We pose the question to you, dear subscribers... If Goldman had actually been doing anything like what the SEC alleged (tricking its own clients into buying the same vehicles it was able to sell short successfully), would this settlement represent any real justice? If the most powerful bank in the world was actually defrauding its A-level clients – pension firms, the world's wealthiest people (including Warren Buffett), insurance companies, and hedge funds – would it still be in business today?
All of these people are smart enough to know if they're being snookered. Or even if they aren't (which is highly unlikely), would a $500 million fine represent an equitable penalty for what was alleged to be a multibillion-dollar fraud?
You think that's too cynical? Not by half. Goldman Sachs earns an incredible amount of money every day doing what's called "proprietary trading." Currently, the firm makes around $100 million, per day, in gross profit.
It makes these trades using huge amounts of leverage. Exactly how much leverage is hard to know because the banks are very good at "dressing up" their numbers at the end of the quarter. But knowledgeable banking analysts estimate the leverage is typically around 20-30 times.
With that much leverage, even a small loss can cause catastrophic damage to a bank's balance sheet. Losses as small as 5% of assets could wipe the bank out.
How do these guys survive taking such enormous risks? And how do they make so much money, almost all of the time?
They don't do the kind of trading most individuals do. They're doing pairs trades (buying one stock, while selling another), which limits risk. They're selling options, rather than buying them. They're trading very low-risk bonds, near maturity. And they have extremely accurate options-pricing models that give them a wide margin of safety on their trades.
Rather than trying to make 10% or 20% on each trade, these strategies are designed to earn small (1%) gains in a way that's essentially risk-free – day after day. While that might not sound like much... it adds up.
They called these guys "masters of the universe" because their knowledge of the markets and high-level trading techniques gave them the ability to essentially print money. Eifrig has taught me many of their techniques. They're not hard to learn... but they require you to understand the difference between real risk and apparent risk. And that takes a bit of expertise.
He walked away from the life – from the fancy dinners, the Rangers hockey tickets, the private planes, etc. He left finance completely and became a medical doctor – an eye doctor to be specific. Medicine was the family business, and Doc wanted to do something he felt was better for society than just making money.
As Doc explained these strategies to me, I realized how perfect they were for people who are retired. A retired person needs income to live on. A short-term trading system that can produce small gains, quickly and safely, would be perfect for our audience, which is filled with retired investors.
The more Doc and I talked over the years, the more excited he became about sharing his secrets with more people – especially retired folks, like him. (Doc has now retired twice: once from Wall Street and more recently from practicing medicine.)
Who better to teach you the right way to trade than a former Goldman trader?
So... even if you never imagined yourself as a trader before, I hope you'll take the time today to watch this short video Doc recorded about his techniques and his time on Wall Street.
At the end of the presentation, you'll have the opportunity to sign up for his new trading advisory – Retirement Trader. Click here to watch.
Regards,
Porter Stansberry
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Date Range:7/19/2010 to 7/24/2010
Date Range:7/19/2010 to 7/24/2010
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