David Merkel | TalkMarkets | Page 4
Founder, Aleph Blog
Contributor's Links: The Aleph Blog Aleph Investments, LLC
David J. Merkel, CFA — 2010-present, I run my own equity asset management shop, called Aleph Investments.  I manage separately managed stock and bond accounts for upper middle class individuals and small institutions.  My minimum is $100,000. From 2008-2010, I was the more

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The Shadows Of The Bond Market’s Past, Part II
Before I start, there is one more thing I want to add regarding 1994-5: the FOMC used signals from the bond markets to give themselves estimates of expected inflation.
The Shadows Of The Bond Market’s Past, Part I
Tonight’s exercise is to describe the historical environments for these time periods, throw in some color from other markets, describe what happened afterward, and see if there might be any lessons for us today. Let’s go!
On The Recent Anxiety In High Yield Bonds
On June 24th, the junk bond markets were fairly tightly bid, and volume in the main high yield ETFs [JNK & HYG] were moderate. By August 1st, that bid had seemingly disappeared, but volume in the main high-yield ETFs were high.
Ignore Yield
Why do I write this, this evening? I keep running into writers and investment advisors that say, “You need a certain yield? I can get you that yield!”
Regarding Underemployment
This is just meant to be a few thoughts. I haven’t worked everything out, but I want to talk about how the labor markets are weak. Yes, the headline statistics are strong. The U-3 unemployment figure is low at 6.2%.
On Time Horizons
No one consistently gets out at the top, and in at the bottom. But many get out at the bottom, and in at the top. That is the way the markets work.
A Different Look At Neglect
It’s good to look at stocks that not everyone else is looking at. A little neglect can be a good thing.
Social Security Troubles
We have known for many years that Social Security’s Disability Trust Fund was in far worse shape than the Retirement Trust Fund, which is also not in good shape.
The Best Of The Aleph Blog, Part 25
In my view, these were my best posts written between February and April 2013:
Book Review: Surveillance Nation
We need to be concerned about what data the government gathers on us, because it may infringe upon our constitutional rights.
Balancing Quality Against Valuation
Ask yourself: where am I getting a reliable stream of earnings and growth relative to what I am paying for the stock?
On Returns-Based Style Analysis
In 1994, we had a problem at Provident Mutual’s Pension Division. Our main external equity manager was having a very lousy year as value managers that focused on absolute yield were getting taken to the cleaners.
On Current Credit Conditions
I am dubious about conditions in the bank loan market because Collateralized Loan Obligations [CLOs] are hot now and there are many that want to take the highest level of risk there.
Book Review: Reducing The Risk Of Black Swans
This is a very short book. I read the whole thing in 40 minutes. It has one main idea: what if you could create a less variable portfolio that returns as much as the traditional 60% S&P 500, 40% Barclays Aggregate blend? Wouldn’t you want that?
Book Review: Panic, Prosperity, And Progress
This book will point out that how an asset is held will make a difference in its future performance. When there is not a lot of debt behind an asset, there may be good prospects.
Understanding Insurance Float
Warren Buffett has made such an impression on value investors and insurance investors, that they think that "float" is magic. But float is not an unmitigated good.
49 to 64 of 65 Posts