Birchtree's Account Talk

Re: Birchtree's account talk

It may be a good idea to get your TAX returns in early, before they cancel all refunds to support the welfare state, spread the wealth?:worried:

Hey Norman, I find it humorous that at the bottom of the 1040 they have a line that says "How much tax do you overpaid" and then the next line is "How much of that do you want refunded?" :D
 
Re: Birchtree's account talk

After that it says something about the amount you owe but nothing about how much you want to pay... :rolleyes: :D
 
Re: Birchtree's account talk

"For years, the IRS has proclaimed that the great virtue of America's tax system is that it's voluntary. How does the IRS define "voluntary"? It says that the tax is voluntary because everyone computes his own income tax liability and sends the amount owed to the government. In other words, if the government calculated the tax liability for the citizenry, the tax would be involuntary. But since the people themselves are permitted to compute the liability, the tax is voluntary.

One can only wonder, of course, how many public-school-trained Americans believe this nonsense. The truth is that the income tax is no more voluntary than the military draft. If you fail or refuse to pay, they will seize you, fine you, jail you, or in the worst case, kill you, just as they do if you refuse to comply with a military draft. "

http://www.fff.org/freedom/0500a.asp
 
Re: Birchtree's account talk

Golly Gee Rochester I do so hope you are wrong. As a contrarian I have to be bullish.


Since you're a Contrarian!


WELCOME TO TRUE CONTRARIAN! I will attempt to create an entertaining, readable, and hopefully refreshing viewpoint a few times each month. Each issue will feature my intermediate-term financial outlook, my long-term financial outlook, and a personal reminiscence.

In order to buy low and sell high, first you have to buy low. Stock markets worldwide are giving you a prime opportunity to do precisely that right now. --Steven Jon Kaplan
BUY NOW, BEFORE YOUR FRIENDS AND FAMILY JUMP IN (January 19, 2009): The global equity markets have been forming an important bullish pattern of higher lows over the past two months, while indices of implied volatility including VXO and VIX have been forming a pattern of lower highs since they had surged to 21-year peaks in the fourth quarter of 2008. Whenever this has happened in the past, a powerful worldwide stock-market rally has always ensued.

Most analysts have remained relentless in their forecast of a "deflationary depression", which is completely at odds with the facts on the ground.

GDX, a fund of gold mining shares which is my largest holding (see "current asset allocation" below), has nearly doubled from its bottom of October 24, 2008. If we were really going to have deflation, then the sector which responds most strongly to inflationary fears would not have surged so sharply during the past three months.

Insider buying of commodity-related shares in the fourth quarter of 2008 was the most pronounced in many commodity-share subsectors since the early 1990s. If we were really going to have deflation, then top executives of commodity-producing companies would not have been so aggressively purchasing their own shares. Remember that these same executives were aggressively selling in the spring of 2008, when everyone wanted to buy them at all-time peaks.

Exactly 1-1/2 years ago, there was a nearly unanimous consensus that inflation would remain at multi-decade lows--and then we had the strongest inflationary surge in eighteen years. Exactly a half year ago, almost all analysts agreed that inflation would continue to be the world's biggest economic problem--and then we had the greatest year-over-year drop in inflation since 1931. Now deflation is all the rage--and will be proven just as wrong as the previous two consensus opinions on this topic. You can consistently conclude that inflation will do exactly the opposite of whatever is the current trendy outlook.

Even many bearish analysts agree that stock markets worldwide are undervalued, while bullish analysts are afraid to go on record as saying "buy now". They're going to turn bullish as soon as the market surges another 20% or so, which will encourage momentum players, hedge funds, chart slaves, and much of the public to start buying stocks again.

An all-time record amount of money is currently sitting in risk-free time deposits including U.S. Treasuries and money-market funds, while concerted central-bank rate cuts have caused these deposits to continue to lose money relative to inflation. People will not tolerate negative real returns indefinitely. They are just waiting for others to jump in before they do. Financial analysts don't mind being wrong--they could hardly have been more misguided than they were in 2008--as long as they're wrong along with the vast majority of their peers. Misery may not love company, but it helps to avoid lawsuits.

Fear of losing money will transform itself into fear of missing out on the rally that everyone else will be enjoying. Buy now, before hedge funds and the general public realize what is going on.

Bearish analysts are confident about the S&P 500 soon going below 750. Bullish analysts are desperately hoping against hope for 1000. With too many investors gloomy and equity fund flows having been net negative since early October, the markets will surge far above these overly pessimistic forecasts. The S&P 500 will likely regain the 1300 level in the second half of 2009 which it has not touched on an intraday basis since September 2, 2008.

Be bold, especially on any down day. Act early. Profit enormously.


http://truecontrarian.com/
 
Re: Birchtree's account talk

"Capitalism without failure is like relogion with hell." Thanks for that article also from Zeal Intelligence. If I can do as well this coming week as I did last week I'll feel like I'm standing in a pile of sweet smelling superlative bull manure up to my waist. I'll tack on 400 more points to the 1300 target for the end of 2009. Even my homebuilders were active Friday. All hail the 1000 point Dow run in the near future.
 
Re: Birchtree's account talk

Regarding dividends and the possibility of dividend reductions and suspensions. There are over 5,000 individual companies and only 500 S&P stocks. You just gotta take your chances - sometimes you win and sometimes you lose. Just about every week I have one of my companies announcing a dividend increase and every now and then I catch a reduction which is to be expected. Being widely diversified with 323 stocks means that I'll be just fine with my discipline of dividend reinvestment. I collected four just yesterday.
Could you give us the names (stock symble) of the companies that have raised their dividend this year? They must be highly rated.:D I am closing in on 1,000 shares of one company; 86 shares of which were dividend reinvestments.:):)
 
Re: Birchtree's account talk

Getting a tax refund to me is like being in the G fund - I just can't remember when the last time was that that happened.
Mr O'bama will see to it you won't get that in the future. You might owe BIG time.
 
A Poorer Californian - Uh, That Tax Refund?

Getting a tax refund to me is like being in the G fund - I just can't remember when the last time was that that happened.

Not Real Happy, Birch...
Not Happy at All...

Didn't plan my taxes well enough to get past the grasping hands of the California LibTards...

I wasn't getting much back.

Now, I'll get a letter of apology or something with a promise to pay.

I'll be piling my farm implements (or the modern government flak version thereof) and heading east. Go east young man, go east.

Or, maybe I'll do the contrarian thang and use my relatively good job to bottom feed the Californian Turd Farm... Maybe a few years of equal incompetence to the past decades will give me an opportunity to buy a small farm in La Jolla or something...
 
Re: Birchtree's account talk

Handballer,

Per your request here is a list of dividend actions in some of my holdings for the last several weeks. Increases: ATG (AGL Resources), ADM (Archer Daniel Midland), BPL (Buckeye Partners), MDP (Meredith Corp), BMS (Bemis), DPL (DPL), CNP (Centerpoint Energy). Reduced: AF (Astoria Finanmcial), BAC (Bank of America). Suspended: ARM (Arvin Meritor), MOT (Motorola). There may be other dividend increases that I'm not aware of. I did have a 1for4 reverse stock split on BTH (Blyth). It's good to see you are participating in some divedend reinvestments on our current bottom. I'm now waiting on the truck load that starts paying again in March.
 
Re: Birchtree's account talk

"Blast Off Time? While we had a positive move this past week, and we closed above the key 850 level on the SPX, in the end we remain in a range bound market. Having said that, from a daily perspective the trading range is getting tighter and an explosive move is likely to follow when a direction is eventually decided upon. The strength in the markets late in the week has now moved the system into a Preliminary Buy Signal."

http://safehaven.com/article-12551.htm
 
Re: Birchtree's account talk

"It is true that non-confirmations often occur at the end of a move and can in some cases signal at least a temporary trend change. It waas then from these minor highs that the Transports moved below their November closing low. But, because the Industrials did not, another non-confirmation has been born. I have heard that some are saying that this downside non-confirmation is bullish."

http://safehaven.com/article-12540.htm
 
Re: Birchtree's account talk

A little more from Richard Russell. "Frankly, I'm very impressed by the stubborn and continuing resistance of the DJ Industrial Average. I don't think many analysts realize the extreme importance of the Industrial's steady refusal to violate its November 20 low. The action of the Dow contains the answer to the trillion-dollar question - Is the bear market in a halting process - or will the stock market signal a continuation of the primary bear market. So here we are - at a crossroads to history. The market will issue its verdict when, and only when, it is ready. But for now - if there's anything traders love, it's a market rising in the face of lousy news. An optimistic outcome would be a continued refusal by the Industrials to close below 7,552. An obviously more bullish outcome would be the DJ Industrial Average and the DJ Transportation Average continuing to rally and ultimately (both Averages) bettering their early - January peaks. Clearly, the most bearish outcome would be the Industrials finally breaking below the November 20 low and thereby confirming that we are still locked in a continuing primary bear market."

http://safehaven.com/article-12544.htm
 
Re: Birchtree's account talk

"Indeed, it has been fear and fear alone that has kept a lid on the cyclical bull market from picking up steam. Cycle-related influences can't be blamed on the market's stubborn refusal to take off. The Kress 6-year cycle bottom has passed and so as the market intermediate term weekly cycle, so any further "dragging" action by the market from here can only be chalked up to excessive investor fear. AT some point, however, that fear will almost certainly be shed as investors grow weary of receiving 0% return on their safehaven investments. A worthwhile interim market bottom typically averages three month and the stock market has been bottoming now for at least that long if not longer."

http://safehaven.com/article-12543.htm
 
Re: Birchtree's account talk

I'm not worried about the market today - probably gave back all my gains from last week. This cruising on the bottom is getting me set up for some good dividend reinvestments for March. That's a positive. The prices may drop but the income produced continues to grow with higher yields. So bring on the frustrations and I'll just keep buying and dollar cost averaging my TSP account. I need a price lower than $9.55 on the C fund by Friday.
 
Re: Birchtree's account talk

Just some perspective.

C fund current pricing started on 2 June 2003 @ $10.03 per share.

After today it will well below that.

5.70 years later, underwater. To bad C fund does not pay quarterly dividends to receive more shares.

Talk about not locking in losses, well you have to lock in gains or that is called - GIVING IT ALL BACK.

Market trades both way. Trading one way is like trying to box with one arm.
 
Re: Birchtree's account talk

I'm not worried about the market today - probably gave back all my gains from last week. This cruising on the bottom is getting me set up for some good dividend reinvestments for March. That's a positive. The prices may drop but the income produced continues to grow with higher yields. So bring on the frustrations and I'll just keep buying and dollar cost averaging my TSP account. I need a price lower than $9.55 on the C fund by Friday.

Birch,
You are da MAN ! :D:D

Obama (I hope it's okay to say that :embarrest:) - anyway of course in his speech he makes it sound like "Don't expect any good things to happen in the Markets this year".

But what's the basis of his speech - 'To push the SP' so what the ..... is he supposed to say ???

Now this is how I see it - everyone and I mean EVERYONE is tired of this endless piece of crap and if we really continue to take a substantial dive to say 600 or BELOW - and that coincides with Credit moving freely and other things... The BULL will shoot up like a Rocket and we will rake in the bucks like never before.
 
Re: Birchtree's account talk

My objective is to accumlate as many shares as possible while I don't need to access my account. So actually the longer the C fund stays under $10 the happier I am because I have time on my side and these could be generational buy conditions - who knows what the future will bring. I took $143K profit off my oceanic account last year and now I have to pay the darn taxes on those gains. My TSP goal for years has been to accumulate at least 40,000 C fund shares and I'm getting real close to that number - should make it this year when I convert my I fund position back to the C fund - in the meantime I just keep collecting those give away shares.
 
Re: Birchtree's account talk

Hi Steady,

This market will eventually start to ignore the policies of BHO. There are actually many good things happening under the radar that will align the planets for a nice bull run - and of course everyone will have doubts - that's just the way it is supposed to happen. Again, to me there is greater risk being out than being in the market. I do hope I collected a few dividends today.
 
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