Latest Insights on RB
This Chart Shows the Biggest Mistake Options Traders Make January 11, 2022 Trading Strategies, Winning Investor Daily It’s important to swim with the natural direction of options, not against them.
Get Ready for 2022’s “Big Short” January 11, 2022 Big Picture. Big Profits., Economy, Investing Originators handed out adjustable-rate mortgages (ARMs) like Halloween candy. Big banks packed them into MBS. They bribed agencies for AAA ratings. Then they sold them to unsuspecting investors. The shorts predicted that when ARMs began to reset in the second quarter of 2007, the MBS market would collapse like a Jenga tower .That’s exactly what it did. Their short bets earned them billions. The rest of the financial system collapsed. All through the movie, I kept asking myself one question … where’s the opportunity for today’s Big Short?
Taiwan’s Bargaining Chip; Tilray Takes Flight & Far Beyond Sausage January 10, 2022 Great Stuff Chip Shortage Come, & Taiwanna Go Home? Work on Wall Street, and I drink bourbon! Chip shortage come, and Taiwanna go home. Stack stock picks ‘till the morning come! Chip shortage come, and Taiwanna go home. Great Ones, if you’ve seen the state of the tech sector on Wall Street, you’d think it was Armageddon. […]
The EV Boom Is Already Here January 7, 2022 Technology, Winning Investor Daily Steve Fernandez and I discuss what we think is going to happen to the EV industry over the next several years.
The Fed’s Great Switcheroo January 7, 2022 Big Picture. Big Profits., Education, U.S. Economy The narrative around the Fed’s increasingly hawkish stance is that it’s reacting to consumer price inflation. That’s part of it, but I’m convinced Powell & Co. are playing at a much bigger game. Ever since the great financial crisis, asset markets have become unhealthily dependent on easy money. Besides exacerbating inequality, artificially inflated asset markets are prone to bubbles and bust. That’s why the most incisive market watchers have been saying for a long time that the Fed’s biggest challenge is to end this dependency once and for all. If that’s what the Fed is doing, how’s it going to affect markets? More importantly, which assets will suffer, and which will prosper?





