Investor's Opinion

Uncle Sam's Economic Plan

Published: 2009-03-03 11:23:00 EST by Unknown

Today I watched a recording of the CNBC interview with Eric Hovde of Hovde Capital Advisors LLC. (Uncle Sam's Economic Plan) This is another guy that has his head on straight. I will be commenting on it today. But before I do that let's review the markets.

Another wild ride in the markets today. The markets showed a wrestiling of position between the bulls and the bears in the U.S. markets, but the bears won out once again.

Asia:
Nikkei => 7,229.72, -50.43, -0.69%
Hang Seng => 12,033.88, -283.58, -2.30%
Straits Times => 1,528.51, -4.89, -0.32%

Europe:
FTSE => 3,512.09, -113.74, -3.14%
DAX => 3,690.72, -19.35, -0.52%
CAC => 2,554.55, -26.91, -1.04%

U.S.:
Dow => 6,725.30, -37.99, -0.56%
Nasdaq => 1,321.01, -1.84, -0.14%
S&P => 696.33, -4.49, -0.64%

As for me:
AMD => 2.07, +0.06
F => 1.81, -0.07
NG=> 2.60, +0.06
AMD DG => 0.10, +0.01
HRP JZ =>1.50, unchanged
NLH JZ => 0.87, -0.68 (Sold to Close).
QAV QZ => 1.83, +0.06 (Bought to Open @ 1.77, Stop @ 1.59)

Because of the continuing lack of confidence in this administrations policy making, I am betting on the bears with a put position against the Nasdaq ETF, Powershares QQQ Trust (QQQQ, QAV QZ - 26MAY09Put). But as you can tell I am still holding on to most my bull positions unless their stops are met.

My reasons for holding are because of their extremely low price points, some technical indicators, and my inherent personal optimism in for those companies.

Now on to the interview, Uncle Sam's Economic Plan. Eric Hovde made a lot of good points that I want to reiterate. But first some numbers that I was interested to see. Residential real estate loans account for about 40% of total bank assets, commercial real estate loans accounts for about 24%, and business real estate loans accounts for about 20%. Right now it is the residential real estate that is dragging down the sector. It's Hovde's opinion that commercial real estate is not far behind from being added to the problem even while residential real estate continues to slide. He is looking for it to start reversing quickly if residential real estate finally stabilizes and turns around.

Hovde is also more realistic in my opinion and states that the U.S. is "rapidly and subtly falling into a depression." This, he says with the understanding that there really isn't a technical definition of a depression. I agree with Hovde, and I am sure most people do, that the credit bubble was the cause.

Despite the governments attempts, the market has a total lack of confidence in the administrations direction. The continuing opinion is that there are too many general ideas out there with few if any specifics about what is being done now to stimulate the economy. As a result the government appears to be quasi socialist at this time.

Hovde describes some examples as to how the stimulus does not focus enough on long lasting changes. One such example is on the building of a high speed rail. Hovde sees a high speed rail as a good idea, but where it is being planned for is the problem. "Anaheim to Vegas? Are you kidding me?! ... go to Disneyland and then gamble away [in the casinos]?", stated Hovde.

Hovde is not overly critical about all things. He understands extending unemployment benefits, funding police forces, health care and the like. He is mostly stunned by the degree and scope. He is even fine with paying higher taxes. (Hearing that shocked me.)

Things that Hovde disagrees with are the taking away of the home mortgage deduction, not for him but for all the others that need it in this housing recession. As far as the deduction for charitable contributions, Hovde is "infuriated" that it is being reduced at this time where charities are needed most.

Another issue that irritates Hovde is the exploitation of cramdown. He sees people gaming the system. He has actually been approached by individuals that are capable of paying there mortgage wanting to stop paying their mortgage just so that they can get a reduction in mortgage payment.

My opinion, why wasn't Hovde added to the President's cabinet?

That is my opinion, you can take it or leave it.

Disclaimer: I am not a stock broker; I am not a financial advisor; I am not recommending to you what to buy or sell. I am just an opinionated investor. If you decide to follow in my footsteps you are taking risk. It is inevitable that I may be wrong. So if you are going to follow in my footsteps that is your own personal decision. I am not responsible for any loss that you may, and probably will, incur regardless of my opinion.

Labels: CNBC, commentary, depression, Econominc Plan, Eric Hovde, Hovde Capital Advisors, interview recap, market results, option picks, stop-loss

Updated: 2009-03-28 18:03:37 EDT