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Dare to be a contrarian and skew the odds in your favor

There have been volumes written about psychology of the marketplace and numerous articles, commentaries, newsletters, and books have addressed the twin emotions of greed and fear and how they contribute to a herd instinct or mentality amongst both lay and professional investors. I prefer to collectively call these people “The Sheeple.” But it is simply human nature to get caught up in the emotion of the moment and react without thorough analysis and clear thinking. At various times in my long investing career, I have found myself part of this unsavory crowd.

Greed and fear are the strongest motivators for Sheeple-style investors driving both bull and bear markets and the so-called business cycle. You will find this idea within most mainstream schools of economic thought.

But in Austrian economic theory, the business cycle is a phenomenon resulting from state and central bank attempts to fiat engineer the supply and demand balance thru interest rate manipulation. Periods of monetary expansion or inflationary “booms” are followed by periodic deflationary recessions or depressions where mal-investments fail and free up capital for new ventures. Government and central bank interference serve to prolong the inevitable “busts” and to retard the inevitable recovery.

Right now, greed and fear are fierce combatants in the marketplace and we are at a tipping point in the bear market economy.

From a low on March 9 to a high on June 11, the S&P 500 gained nearly 40%. During this four month rally in the capital markets, “green shoot” greed was the latest in spring fashion and there was increasing talk of a quick economic recovery by many pundits.

But investor confidence is fragile and abject fear gripped the markets again on Monday, Tuesday, and into Wednesday of this final week of June. The S&P 500 gave back 8% of its impressive spring rally in just two trading sessions.

Relatively minor news, actually opinion, was the catalyst that sent the stock, currency, and commodities markets tumbling. On Monday, the World Bank said that the global recession is worse than they previously forecast in March and predicted a contraction in U.S. GDP of 3% for the year and an era of markedly slower world economic growth.

The Dow immediately lost 200 points, the dollar fell below 80 on the index, oil dropped 3.5%, and gold lost $20, reaching a 30-day low of $914 and quickly breaching support at $930.

Investors are trying very hard to be greedy but every little perturbation in this Humpty-Dumpty economy brings back our number one nemesis, fear.

Markets are volatile. Witness what happened on Wednesday afternoon when the Fed came out with a slightly more upbeat take on the economy than its previous communiqué in April. All markets bounced back and at close on Thursday, June 25, when this missive was written, oil was pushing $70 again, gold was above $940, and the Dow had regained more than half of its losses for the week. Folks, that is prima facie evidence of fear and greed running amuck.

In my opinion this four-month episode is not the beginning of a bull-market rally. Call it a “dead cat bounce,” or a “sucker rally,” or whatever you will, there are too many factors in our economy that are just plain wrong.

Market volume is down, unemployment is up, state and local governments are insolvent, Fed Ben is helicoptering dollars, Obama is bowing to petrol kings, and Americans are buying their Big Macs with max’d out credit cards. The list goes on and on, but I won’t.

But what you say about the recent strength in industrial commodities? Does that not foreshadow increased demand and industrial output? I emphatically say no: It is an artifact of speculation by hedge funds and continued stockpiling by the Chinese who understand hard assets are a better bet than U.S. debt.

Don’t be fooled.

Greed, fear, and herd instinct amongst the Sheeple, whether lay or professional, are especially important factors that fuel both big bull and mama bear markets. This is undoubtedly a mama bear and as Yogi says, “It ain’t over till it’s over.”

In retrospect, Greenspan didn’t get much right during his long tenure as Fed Chairman. But his take on greed, he called it “irrational exuberance,” was bang-on.

It is of utmost importance to control your emotions when investing. Quick decisions are generally bad decisions when emotions are high and running rampant. Greed and fear are not part of a viable investing philosophy. Neither is gut instinct. Don’t let the herd sweep you into the stampede and over a cliff.

Lest you think I ride a high horse, I plead guilty for following the herd at times in my investing career. Hopefully both you and I have learned from these expensive lessons.

A good stock investment must start with evaluation of the company’s fundamentals. This is especially important in the riskier sectors of the market. If you are reading this, it is likely that a portion of your investment portfolio is dedicated to high-risk venture capital stocks.

If you employ a conservative investing philosophy to the junior resource sector, you can mitigate a portion of that risk (Mercenary Musing, May 26, 2008).  I have written previously about the key ingredients to investing in junior resource stocks: A company must have the right share structure, the right people, and the right project to pique my Mercenary interest (Mercenary Musing, December 15, 2008). I encourage you to read it and stay out of the herd mentality for your own investing health. 

Never forget that investing in the penny stocks is gambling. By taking a fundamental, contrarian, and disciplined approach and doing detailed and careful due diligence, you can skew the odds in your favor. We all like gambling games where our odds of winning are higher than the average Joe’s.

Just say no to greed and fear. Refuse to follow the Sheeple. Dare to be a contrarian.  

 

Contact: Mickey@MercenaryGeologist.com

Disclaimer: I am not a certified financial analyst, broker, or professional qualified to offer investment advice. Nothing in a technical report, commentary, this website, and other content constitutes or can be construed as investment advice or an offer or solicitation to buy or sell stock. Information is obtained from research of public documents and content available on the company’s website, regulatory filings, various stock exchange websites, and stock information services, through discussions with company representatives, agents, other professionals and investors, and field visits. While the information is believed to be accurate and reliable, it is not guaranteed or implied to be so. The information may not be complete or correct; it is provided in good faith but without any legal responsibility or obligation to provide future updates. I accept no responsibility, or assume any liability, whatsoever, for any direct, indirect or consequential loss arising from the use of the information. The information contained in a technical report, commentary, this website, and other content is subject to change without notice, may become outdated, and will not be updated. A technical report, commentary, this website, and other content reflect my personal opinions and views and nothing more. All content of this website is subject to international copyright protection and no part or portion of this website, technical report, commentary, and other content may be altered, reproduced, copied, emailed, faxed, or distributed in any form without the express written consent of Michael S. (Mickey) Fulp, Mercenary Geologist.

Copyright © 2009 Mercenary Geologist. All Rights Reserved.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Michael S. (Mickey) Fulp

The Mercenary Geologist Michael S. “Mickey” Fulp is a Certified Professional Geologist with a B.Sc. Earth Sciences with honor from the University of Tulsa, and M.Sc. Geology from the University of New Mexico. Mickey has 30 years experience as an exploration geologist searching for economic deposits of base and precious metals, industrial minerals, coal, uranium, oil and gas, and water in North and South America, Europe, and Asia.

Mickey has worked for junior explorers, major mining companies, private companies, and investors as a consulting economic geologist for the past 22 years, specializing in geological mapping and property evaluation. In addition to Mickey’s professional credentials and experience, he is high-altitude proficient and is bilingual in English and Spanish. From 2003 to 2006, Mickey made four outcrop ore discoveries in Peru, Nevada, Chile, and British Columbia.

Mickey is respected throughout the mining and exploration community for his ongoing work as an analyst for public and private companies, investment funds, newsletter and website writers, private investors, and brokers.

 
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Comments
Hey Mickey (you so fine you blow my mind ...) How's things on the ranch? You say there are so many things wrong with the economy that the little rally we had is in essence a chimera. I just want to suggest evidence now proves all the things that are wrong are SYMPTOMS of a root problem which readers can explore at www.webofdebt.com, or by googling the free doc "The Money Masters" (+ website of the same name). 'We the people' educate ourselves on the need for fundamental economic reform or we is all in much deeper doo-doo real soon!
With a 65 trillion debt the us has! Juniors that make gold bars will do fine Saudi Arabia just announced it was shutting down half of its oil production. It also said it would keep the capacity shut down for at least a year – maybe longer. The move would wipe out about five percent of the world’s oil supply overnight. What do you expect to happen? Itwould be bedlam. Oil prices would skyrocket. The price would jump to$100 or more within minutes. Prices would spike even if demandcontinued to dip and oil stockpiles stayed high.Nothing during the weekhas changed the basic long term position. Gold price remains above itspositive sloping long term moving average line and the momentumindicator remains in its positive zone (using the daily data version). Nothing during the week caused a change in rating, therefore the rating remains BULLISH
With a 65 trillion debt the us has! Juniors thay make gold bars will do fine Saudi Arabia just announced it was shutting down half of its oil production. It also said it would keep the capacity shut down for at least a year – maybe longer. The move would wipe out about five percent of the world’s oil supply overnight. What do you expect to happen? Itwould be bedlam. Oil prices would skyrocket. The price would jump to$100 or more within minutes. Prices would spike even if demandcontinued to dip and oil stockpiles stayed high.Nothing during the weekhas changed the basic long term position. Gold price remains above itspositive sloping long term moving average line and the momentumindicator remains in its positive zone (using the daily data version). Nothing during the week caused a change in rating, therefore the rating remains BULLISH.
MNM & PEM - TOP Gold Juniors!
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