Saturday, April 4, 2026

April 30, 2010

Warren Buffet’s Problems?

I just turned on business TV for the first time in a couple years. There is a four way debate about Warren Buffett’s problems. Ladies and gentlemen, I am hear to announce that Warren Buffett does not have any problems. Perhaps the people on TV should talk about the people who have problems–like the people who are out of work–rather than the richest man in the world, Warren Buffet’s problems.

March 2, 2010

Lifestyle Management Inc.

Earlier today I was closing some deals when I remembered that it was time for me to address the eBusiness Cashual nation. I started eBusiness Cashual (eBC) while traversing a myriad of sumptuous hotels and satellite castles that Robin Leach could only add to his champagne wishes and caviar dreams. It was within these undisclosed locations that I made my formal Cashual breakthrough: my rags to riches tale is fodder for more than a Hollywood epic. I had undervalued myself—I had a higher purpose.

As this indubitable knowledge materialized, the eBC concept was conceived—yet it remained unborn. The possibility hung in the air in front of me like a 15-year-old awaiting his driver’s test. Still the dream was taking form, and I believed in it.

Laboring to birth my business brain-child, I considered the most important aspects of industry and production. The best businesses are the ones that empower others to create their own businesses. Think eBay or Google or Amway. How many people have founded businesses upon the generous platforms of the these giants? The catch: though free to a large audience, these businesses do require some fees to be paid. Someone is taking a cut. But If I could come up with a business so robust that it was impervious to these cagey cuts, a profit would be profit.

Now I have transcended entrepreneur and become philosopher. If I define my business as one that empowers others, but also disables the process of profit skimming, I may just have a new concept: the reverse pyramid scheme!

Standing atop my pyramid and reveling in my intellectual bounds, I realized after all, it is all about me. In attempting to explain how it wasn’t, I confirmed that it was. The best businesses are free to a very large audience, are viral, and no one else takes a cut of the profit. Deducing through the algorithm, it becomes clear: The best businesses are lifestyles.

Thus the painfully beautiful birth of eBC—the lifestyle of Vinnie Vega—sprawling in it’s newborn purity before you. EBC is a collaborative enterprise contact management cloud solution from which we can all gain. It is what it is. There is no face or book in it. Here at eBC, we start in the street, steady on our feet, and we always keep it eBusiness Cashual.

We Love You eBC.

October 29, 2009

Market Rap 29.October.2009

It was written on the walls that success is a process
No matter how hard I fall I know it is some progress
Notches of the ladder I climb, holdin a bottle of wine
So many paths to take, I’m followin mine
-Common

Yesterday, I wrote about Goldman Sachs lowering their expectations for Q3 GDP to 2.7%. This morning, the Advance GDP number was announced at 3.5%–higher than expectations and far higher than Goldman’s lowered target of 2.7%. This is the first of three GDP announcements. We’ll see preliminary GDP on November 22 and final GDP on December 22. I find it tough to think that an advance number of 3.5% can be lowered all the way down to 2.7%. Then again, don’t count Goldman out. Goldman is Goldman.

No matter where the final Q3 GDP number comes in, the announcement today is significant in that the economy grew in the 3rd quarter for the first time in just over a year. It was widely expected that there would be growth, and now the actual growth numbers will be analyzed and argued about on television.

There will be a myriad of economic releases in the next few weeks that will provide insight into what Q4 GDP will come in at. If Q4 GDP expectations need to be revised downward, there will be large gains by being short the right sectors.

Gross Domestic Product

Gross Domestic Product

Risk On, Risk Off

The higher than expected GDP announcement this morning spiked S&P futures and induced a selloff in the US Dollar. I have been referring to the “risk aversion trade.” The risk aversion trade is a risk off trade–when traders and investors run for cover. In the current market, I’d describe the risk off trade as being short the S&P, long the US dollar and long treasuries. Today’s market was the opposite of the risk aversion (risk off) trade. Traders scrambled to the risk on trade–long the S&P, oil, short treasuries, short US Dollar. When the risk on trade is on, the Volatility Index (VIX) trades lower. When the risk off trade is on, the VIX trades higher. From the intraday charts below, you can see that what the S&P lost yesterday, it gained back today. Conversely, what the Volatility Index (VIX) gained yesterday, it gave back today. Yesterday was risk off, today was risk on. You follow?

Volatility Index - 15 Minute

Volatility Index - 15 Minute

S&P 500 Index - 15 Minute

S&P 500 Index - 15 Minute

Phone Calls

Can a phone call change your view of the market? This one quite possibly could. I have long opined in these pages that there is more risk to this market than what it is priced for. Of late, I have written of a sudden spike in the dollar that no one is prepared for. After a phone call with a broker in Japan last night, I think it is best to be short select names in the weakest sectors rather than be short broader indices or sectors. Here is why. My broker in Japan alerted me to something very important: Japanese default swap spreads are at their widest in 6 months. Other sovereign default swaps have seen a significant widening as well. This is a sign of potential dollar weakness to come. If the dollar weakens, it will be tougher for the S&P index to sell off dramatically. It is for this reason that I am once again long some silver options (calls). If this widening of swap spreads is a sign–a tell in poker parlance–of dollar weakness to come, the best way to take advantage is to be long precious metals.

The Wall Street Beat

And there you have it, straight from the gut of Vinnie Vega of the Wall Street Beat, a subsidiary of Volatility News.

And the beat goes on.