Skylar Tibbits: Can we make things that make themselves?

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By Barry Ritholtz - September 19th, 2011, 10:45AM

MIT researcher Skylar Tibbits works on self-assembly — the idea that instead of building something (a chair, a skyscraper), we can create materials that build themselves, much the way a strand of DNA zips itself together. It’s a big concept at early stages; Tibbits shows us three in-the-lab projects that hint at what a self-assembling future might look like.

10 Monday AM Reads

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By Barry Ritholtz - September 19th, 2011, 9:30AM

Here is what I am starting off my week reading:

• A Little Inflation Can Be a Dangerous Thing (NYT)
• Rearranging the Deck Chairs (Tim Duy’s Fed Watch) see also Fed Ponders Jobs, Inflation Targets (WSJ)
• Ray Dalio and Bridgewater Associates Continue to Amaze with 25% YTD Gains (International Business Times)
• Effort on Home Loans Stalls (WSJ)
• A New York double feature:
……-Jobs and the G.O.P. (New Yorker)
……-Obama’s Economic Quagmire:  (New York Mag)
• The real truth about Social Security (The Economist)
Bartlett: Class Warfare, Republican Style (Social Science Research Network) see also Republicans Accuse Obama of Waging ‘Class Warfare’ With Millionaire Tax Plan (Fox News)
• Is In Time the intelligent sci-fi film we’ve been waiting for? (Guardian) see also What Would Humanity Be Like Without Aging? (Discover Magazine)
• The United States of Design (Fast Company)
• Adult GOP Governor Calls for a More Honest Debate (NYT) see also Republican front-runners Mitt Romney, Rick Perry come from different worlds (Washington Post)

What are you reading?
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The Greek hour glass

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By Peter Boockvar - September 19th, 2011, 7:44AM

“We can’t move along without real implementation of fiscal reforms and we are late,” said Greece’s Finance Minister over the weekend, publicly acknowledging that they have not fully followed thru with the conditions demanded by the EU and IMF in order to release more money to Greece as part of Bailout 1. The Finance Minister will have a call with the EU and IMF at 12pm est time to discuss the current situation. I still assume Greece gets the next allotment of money in 2 weeks, followed by full passage of the EFSF by all 17 Parliaments and then an orderly restructuring of Greek debt where bondholders suffer at least a 50% cut in the value of their holdings off par value, more than twice the 21% reduction assumed with the current debt exchange. There are 3 ways to cut debt, pay it off, write it off or inflate out of it. Option 1 is a sign of health, option 2 is always painful but it cleanses while door #3 is the most dangerous. Greece needs to cleanse. In Asia, the Shanghai index fell to the lowest since July ’10 and the Hang Seng closed at the lowest since July ’09.

Fork in the Road

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By Barry Ritholtz - September 19th, 2011, 7:15AM

“When you come to a fork in the road, take it.”

-Yogi Berra

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The quote above describes the dilemma that investors find themselves in. They are at a fork in the road, and the noise machine all around them is advising that take it. The amusing issue, alluded to but never answered by Yogi, is which way to go.

The credit crisis blew up a mere 3 years ago; the recency effect has investors fearing a replay of that crisis, only centered on European instead of US banks. Bloomberg observes more than $75B in fund withdrawals have been pulled from U.S. equity funds since the end of April (Fund Withdrawals Top Lehman as $75B Pulled). That is more than the five month withdrawal after the collapse of Lehman Brothers.  US stocks have lost $2.1 trillion in market cap May 2011.

Wall Street is lagging the trading. Street Strategists started the year looking for solid gains, including year end consensus targets of 1365 on the S&P 500 — about 8 12% higher from Friday’s close. They have been tripping over themselves to lower their SPX predictions, but as the WSJ observes, they are still looking relatively bullish (Wall Street’s Optimism Fades).

Hence, our Stew of Negativity is fairly well understood: Start with fears of another 2008 bank crisis; add a new cyclical recession as your two base ingredients of investor’s worries. Season that with the ongoing de-leveraging and the long slow recovery process that typically follows credit crises; add the accompanying housing overhang, merely half way through its rush towards 10 million foreclosures. Salt & Pepper to taste.

Are there any positives? Sentiment is negative, markets are oversold. As mentioned last week, I wished sentiment and oversold readings were more extreme to pull the trigger to get long. Missing the 5.3% pop [UPDATE: To clarify, I mean for a trade; I still have a 50% long exposure via value/dividend equities] last week was not enough to pull me further (or get me excited) about the long side, but it may have worked off some of the oversold conditions.

In the hunt for the contrary indicators, I noticed a few modestly interesting items, most from Mike Santoli’s Barron’s column this week, History Lessons. Amongst the notable data points Mike notes:

• “Nasdaq had its best weekly gain since July 2009.”

• Deutsche Bank Strategist Binky Chadha said that outflows from stock mutual funds were “comparable to those around March 2009

• Short interest relative to market capitalization has “exceeded any level going back to exceeded any level going back to 2009.

Monthly Merrill Lynch fund manager survey revealed “the lowest risk appetite since early 2009.

• Ratio of corporate-insider stock sales to purchases has been at or below 10 for six straight weeks, for the first time since January to March of 2009.

• Citi global equity strategist Robert Buckland notes global cuts in corporate earnings forecasts “have had their weakest five weeks since 2009.”

Those are the positives, though they are hardly compelling. I am unsure of the history of using outflows over so short a period, and I recall outflows were strong for 2 years. The fund manager survey is broad, and is questionable as a timing tool.  Insider stock sales t0 purchases ratio tend to accelerate during a downturn; they can broadly inform but have a greater value when they reach extremes. Cuts in corporate earning forecasts similarly don’t make me bullish; nor should the weakest 5 weeks of cuts (really?) give anyone comfort.

The only data point in the list that warrants close attention is the Short interest relative to market capitalization. High short interest can equal a squeeze play. It acts as buying power on any move Think of how QE2 liquidity moved equities higher August 2010, eventually leading to an equity pile in.

Investors are now at a fork in the road; Yogi would suggest they take it . . .

Surfing Bulldog Tillman

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By Barry Ritholtz - September 19th, 2011, 6:00AM

Surfing Bulldog Tillman. Ron Davis is the owner of this 6 year old English Bulldog Tillman living in Oxnard California. More about this athlete:

http://www.youpet.com/pet/17789

Tillman’s channel:

http://www.youtube.com/user/tillmanskateboarding

Look Out Below, Sunday Nite Edition

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By Barry Ritholtz - September 18th, 2011, 11:11PM

click for updated Futures:

(Updated at 5:43am)

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Hey, lots can happen between now and tomorrow’s open . . . !

How Different is this Consumer Credit Cycle?

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By Barry Ritholtz - September 18th, 2011, 5:00PM

The short answer, as made clear by The Chart Store graphs below, is VERY:

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Presentation Secrets

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By Barry Ritholtz - September 18th, 2011, 3:00PM

U.S. Skating On Thin Ice

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By Barry Ritholtz - September 18th, 2011, 1:30PM

Source:
Economist: U.S. Skating On Thin Ice
NPR, September 17, 2011

Apprenticed Investor: Know Thyself

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By Barry Ritholtz - September 18th, 2011, 1:00PM

Apprenticed Investor: Know Thyself
Barry Ritholtz
05/03/05 – 10:20 AM EDT

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Statistical evidence suggests a high probability that you underperformed the broader market last year, and most investors will likely underperform again this year. But it’s not just retail investors. The pros are barely any better. In fact, four out of five investors will do worse than the S&P 500 this year.

The problem, it seems, is a design flaw.

Indeed, many classic investor errors — overtrading, groupthink, panic selling, marrying positions (i.e., refusing to sell), chasing stocks, rationalizing, freezing up — are mostly due to our genetic makeup. Humans have evolved to survive in a harsh, competitive landscape. To do well in the capital markets, on the other hand, requires a skill set that is very often the antithesis of those innate survival instincts.

Why is that? The problems lay primarily in our large mammalian brains. It is actually better at some things than you may realize, but (unfortunately) much worse at many others you are unaware of. Most people are unaware they even have these (for lack of a better word) “defects.” The fact is, when it comes to investing, humans just ain’t built for it.

Psychology Vs. Economics

In order to understand how humans invest requires more than the study of economics; one also needs to comprehend behavioral psychology. Combining both cognitive science and behavioral economics can yield powerful insights into the conduct of investors.

I recommend Cornell professor Thomas Gilovich’s book How We Know What Isn’t So to investors all the time. The professor’s contribution to the investment community is his study of human reasoning errors. More specifically, Gilovich studies the inherent biases and faulty thinking endemic to all us humans. These faulty analyses are pretty much hard-wired into our species.

How do these defects manifest themselves? In all too many ways: Humans have a tendency to see order in randomness. We find patterns where none exist. While that trait might have helped a baby recognize its parents (thereby improving the odds for its survival), seeing patterns where none exist is counter-productive when it comes to investing.

We also selectively perceive data, hoping to find something that confirms our prior views. We ignore data that contradicts those prior views. We even reinterpret old evidence so it is more in sync with our perspective. Then, we only selectively remember those things that support our case. Last, we overuse Heuristics, which is defined as simple, efficient rules of thumb that have been proposed to explain how people make decisions, come to judgments and solve problems, typically when facing complex problems or incomplete information (call them mental short cuts). These short cuts often generate “systematic errors” or blind spots in our analytical reasoning.

And that’s only a partial list of analytical imperfections you have inherited.

The good news: These defects can be overcome.

We can develop an awareness of these specific defects, and we can learn to employ strategies that attempt to overcome these inherent analytical shortcomings.

What Have You Learned in the Past 2 Seconds?

Let’s place these defects into a historical framework within the context of the capital markets. My favorite illustration as to why humans simply aren’t hard-wired to undertake risk/reward analysis in capital markets comes from Michael Mauboussin, Legg Mason Funds’ chief investment strategist.

Mauboussin takes our evolutionary argument — the mind is better suited for hunting and gathering than it is for understanding Bayesian analysis — and places it into a chronological context. In an article titled What Have You Learned in the Past 2 Seconds?, he creates a timeline of human history scaled to equal one day.

He starts at the beginning: Homo Sapiens came into existence 2 million years ago. Next, Mitochondrial Eve, the common female ancestor among all living humans, lived less than 200,000 years ago. Last, he notes that modern finance theory, the framework to which investors are supposed to adhere, was formalized about 40 years ago. If all of human history were a day long, then investing is only about two seconds old. Is it any surprise that most humans do it so poorly? The vast majority of human history has been spent learning to survive, not analyze P/E ratios.

Learning to fight nature won’t be easy. To outperform, you sometimes must go against the crowd, despite the appeal and seeming safety in numbers. You must be humble and willing to admit error; meaning you’ll have to overcome your ego’s predisposition to avoid embarrassment, so as to maintain status amongst your tribe (and thereby enhance survival probabilities).

Most investors are overconfident to a fault. Don’t believe me? Consider the following anecdote: A man was terrified to fly, yet thought nothing of roaring down the street — sans helmet, no less — on his Harley. That reveals a high degree of confidence in his own skills vs. a highly trained pilot’s. That’s some risk-analysis engine you got there, bub.

That blind faith in our own abilities may have come in handy on mammoth hunts, but it is hardly beneficial when to comes to picking stocks. And that’s before we even get to the “flight or fight” response. Our natural instinct during periods of volatility is to stop the pain, not to endure it with patience. The natural reactions to discomfort or threat — coupled with a natural inability to be patient — doesn’t serve us well in the market. During market bottoms, most of the herd is selling. To buy during periods of intense selling means leaving the safety of the crowd, standing out, risking humiliation.

We simply were not designed for that.

Why Not Just Index?

This overconfidence leads to the optimistic yet misguided belief that most of us can beat the market. We must believe we can outperform the major indices. Otherwise, the rational thing to do would be to simply buy a major index and forget about it.

A few recent studies support those conclusions. One in USA Today found that most people are no good at investing, and another in The New York Times revealed that people have a poor grasp of basic economics.

Most investors — the 80% who underperform — would probably be better off going the index route. If you’re still interested in trying to outperform — despite all we discussed today — then I admire your gumption. Over the coming months, we will share some tools to do just that.

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Next time, we will take a closer look at the competition. (Be afraid … be very afraid.)

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