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On the days that I don't publish, like today, you will
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Oddball Investing

The Daily Reckoning

London, England

Wednesday, November 17, 2004

---------------------

*** An Indian summer of misplaced enthusiasm... curiouser
and curiouser... the reckless spending continues - but for
how long?

*** The "almighty" buck... who would win in a currency
beauty pageant? 

*** Searching for the value in contemporary art...
marvelous tomfoolery... fatherly advice... and more!

---------------------
You are receiving this email as a part of your FREE
Subscription to The Daily Reckoning. Should you wish to
unsubscribe please follow the instructions at the bottom of 
this email.
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Today seems little different than yesterday. The leaves may 
be a little browner on the sycamores along the Thames. The
air may be a little crisper. Or is it warmer than it was
yesterday? 

Day by day, we hardly notice any difference. But by degrees 
and hours, it the weather must be changing. Come January,
it will be noticeably colder.

The seasons of the market are likewise irrepressible, but
less predictable. Those warm animal spirits that drove
Google over 200 times earnings must cool sometime. Just as
there has been an Indian summer of enthusiasm for the
techs, so there must come a New England winter of despair.
We just don't know when, exactly, it will come. 

Google is like a work of contemporary art... No one knows
what it is worth, but investors feel very smart and
up-to-date owning it. As Jim Cramer says... it just gives
you such a tingle, you know you gotta own it.

The markets have been reacting to the Bush victory. As you
might expect, most investors have celebrated: They've
bought defense stocks, sure that Bush & Co. will continue
their reckless spending.

Meanwhile, gold and the dollar have sold off. Not everyone
believes the Greenspan/Bush team will be able to sustain
its spending spree for long. Foreigners are easing off on
their purchases of U.S. debt. The smart money is taking
precautions.

But now everyone seems to think the dollar will move.

"I was just in New Orleans," colleague Dan Denning reported 
yesterday. "Everybody's so down on the dollar... it will
probably go up."

The dollar story is not quite as simple as it looks.
Economists are sure the dollar will fall. Hedge funds and
smart investors are short. But the rest of the world is
very, very long dollars. Dollars fill safes and mattresses
all over the planet. Dollars are used in global markets and 
kept in central bank vaults. Americans have nothing but
dollars.

Curiouser still, the U.S. Fed has not merely brought about
an explosion in the number of dollars around the world; it
has also lit the fuse of other currencies all over the
world. The United States sells dollar debt. Foreign central 
banks buy it by issuing currency of their own. The result?
A world flooded not only with dollars, but also with yen,
kroner, euros, and pounds. The broad money supply in
Australia is rising at a 9.7% annual rate. In Britain, the
pounds pile up at a 9.3% rate. Canada multiplies its
loonies at 9.1% per year. The Danes are expanding their
money supply at a breathtaking 10.7%. Euros are increasing
6% annually. And the dollar - the U.S. broad money supply
is only increasing at a fairly modest rate of 4.8%, a rate
that is still far above the increase in GDP.

In a beauty contest of currencies, all the contestants have 
warts, bulges, and humped backs. Why should judges pass
over the dollar to give any of its rivals the tiara? Then
again, only the dollar has the crossed eyes of a 5% (of
GDP) trade deficit... and the bow legs of a $450 billion
federal deficit. Only the dollar has the buck teeth of a 1% 
national savings rate... along with the club foot of a
consumer economy that needs 75% of the world's savings just 
to stay at the same level of self-indulgence.

None of the contestants are fetching. But maybe none are
less fetching than the U.S. dollar. Perhaps it can win the
prize for "best personality."

What catches our eye instead, is the glint of metal...
something that neither watches its weight nor sleeps with
the judges. 

Gold, dear reader, gold. It is what people turn to when the 
days grow cold... and when paper gets too ugly to look at.

More news, from our team at The Rude Awakening:

--------------

Tom Dyson, reporting from Baltimore... 

"'And don't worry about feeling unpatriotic about taking
your money out of the country,' continued Doug Casey,
'because, in a funny sort of way, you are doing the right
thing for America. When all the money is gone, you'll be
the one bringing it back to resurrect the country.'" 

To get the whole scoop, check out today's issue of 

The Rude Awakening
http://www.dailyreckoning.com/body_headline.cfm?id=4271

--------------

Bill Bonner, back in London:

*** Addison Wiggin, checking in from China... 

"Those no good. No good."

It's not so much that she said it, but the way in which she 
said it.

Haggling in China is an operatic affair. Hand gestures and
loud outbursts are common. Storming off in disgust is
encouraged. "It's a little like cheating," said one member
of our party. "We niggle for a dollar here and there, but
for the merchants it's a matter of putting food on the
table." 

So imagine our surprise when one merchant reacted in this
way:

While haggling for a digital camera in Beijing's famous
pearl market, a cohort on the trip threw down $200 in U.S.
dollars, rather than Chinese yuan. The woman sneered in
disgust. "Those no good. No good here." We'd had become
accustomed to U.S. dollars carrying a little extra
bargaining power, but not here. She wouldn't settle for
anything in U.S. dollars, demanding remminbi, the people's
currency, instead.

A sign of things to come? Given the dollar's plight of
late, one can only wonder. [Ed. Note: Could it be possible
that America's Golden Age is coming to an end, and that
China is the up-and-coming superpower?  For a glimpse of
what may happen in the future, see:

China 2050
http://www.agora-inc.com/reports/DRI/chinaB22

*** Probably no stock has risen more than the stock in
Terrorism-Is-Us, Inc. The terrorists probably couldn't wish 
for a better enemy or better friend than the Bush
administration. So far, its every move seems to have
calculated to boost up bin Laden's cause. Today's front
page headline in London - This One's Faking He's Dead -
surely added to terrorism's market share. 

*** There are two big spheres of human action - private and 
public. In private, we look at contemporary art and wonder, 
not why people would buy it, but why they would accept it
if it were given to them for nothing. But if a man wishes
to pay $5 for a scribble to place on his wall... if he
enjoys looking at it... so much the better.

But that, we believe, is such as great an exception as an
honest senator. Much more often, a man buys a work of
contemporary art to embellish his own opinion of himself as 
a hip and progressive fellow. Law, public relations, and
consulting firms pay millions to place the most appallingly 
moronic things on their walls for the very same purpose -
to advertise that they are "with it." 

We visited an odd collection outside Utrecht in Holland, a
few weeks ago. In one forgettable work, a series of rocks
were laid out upon the floor. There was nothing special
about the rocks nor about their arrangement - they were
spaced out evenly, in rows. Another great work - for it was 
worthy of a museum - showed us pieces of what looked as
though it could have been old hemp rope, or a blond
Rastafarian's dreadlocks. There was no more to it. 

Contemporary art rarely has any private value. No one looks 
at a contemporary portrait and fondly remembers a
grandfather. No one looks at a contemporary landscape and
dreams of his childhood. No one looks at a contemporary
painting and feels the glory of Heaven or the majesty of
Earth. Instead, they look at it and say: "What a clever
idea." Or, "What in the world is that supposed to mean?"

No one knows which bits of "art" are worth anything at all. 
A gimmick may catch on. Or it may not. If it does, the
hustlers know they can make a lot of money on it; Cy
Twombly's silly scribbles just sold for $5.38 million. If
it had not caught on, on the other hand, the thing would
have been just thrown away. No one would get any value out
of the thing on a purely private basis.

The problem art hustlers face is finding a way to describe
the "art" in a way that makes it valuable. This was the
task confronting the cataloguers when they put together
last weeks' sales at Christies and Sotheby's. 

Rome, a work by Thomas Demand is "a picture of an office
that has been vandalized," explained the International
Herald Tribune report. But the catalogue found a way to
dazzle buyers. "The strange physicality of the photograph's 
subject is recognized as paper construction," began the
description. Some poor schmuck paid $176,000 for it.

The International Herald Tribune described Jeff Koon's
Bracelet, as "a painting which interprets the photograph of 
an outsized gold bracelet set against a shimmery pink
backdrop." But the catalogue promoter had another view:
Bracelet, it explained, is about "sexuality"...
"spirituality." Some hopeful punter paid $2.24 million for
it.

And of course, there were the old favorites, such as a 1961 
drawing by Jasper Johns, in which, according to the
International Herald Tribune account, "all the digits from
zero to nine [are] on top of one another." But the
catalogue's description - "Underpinning the pattern
achieved is the fact that he has denied the validity of
each separate number. They are no longer 'readable.'" -
helped bring the price up to $11 million. 

What marvelous tomfoolery! We stand back in awe and
admiration. For every man with a million bucks in his
pocket, nature has given us an elegant scam to take it away 
from him.

*** "Yes, I'm discouraged," Jules, 16, began last night,
almost bitterly. "I studied hard for that biology test and
all I got was a D. Then, I worked hard on that English
paper... and I only got a B-. It's just not worth the
effort. I work hard... I stay up late every night doing
this work... and I don't get anywhere. I'm sick of it. My
school sucks. My teachers suck. My courses suck. From now
on, I'm just going to do the minimum to get by. It just
doesn't matter and I just don't care anyway."

A parent has to reply. But he knows not what to say. 

Your editor took a shot. He gave him a version of our
simpleminded Essentialist Philosophy: 

"Jules, you can't change your school. You can't change your 
teachers. You can't change your subjects. In fact, at this
stage in the school year [Jules is in his last year of high 
school, preparing his college applications]... you can't
change anything but yourself. 

"If you allow yourself to take this attitude, you're going
to feel bad about yourself as well as about everything
else. You'll feel bad partly because you're getting bad
grades... but more importantly because you'll know that
you're not doing the right thing.

"Look, you don't have any control over what grades you get. 
I mean, all you can do is to do your best. And keep a
positive attitude about what you're doing. That's it.
That's all. That's the whole enchilada. But if you do that, 
some sort of miracle happens. You feel better about what
your doing. You feel better about yourself too - because,
no matter what happens, you know that you're doing the
right thing - your best. That's all you can do, after all.
And somehow, someway... doing your best really does produce 
the results. Sure, there are setbacks... but somehow, the
effect of a sustained effort over a long period of time...
and a cheerful attitude towards what you are doing and the
people around you... gets where you are going."

"Hmmm... " said Jules doubtfully.

His father has his fingers crossed.

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---------------------

The Daily Reckoning PRESENTS: In this classique essay, that 
originally ran on July 22, 2204, James Boric shows us that
contrary to popular opinion, there's only one proven way to 
make consistent big money in the stock market. Don't
believe us? Read on... 

ODDBALL INVESTING
by James Boric

It all started with Forrest Berwind "Bill" Tweedy in
1920... 

Bill was a strange fellow. No one really knows where he
came from or when he was born. And if you saw him today,
you would probably laugh.

The man wore suspenders, had a bushy mustache and a
good-sized potbelly. He never married or had kids. He ate
lunch at the same place at the same time every day. He was
an oddball, to put it bluntly. And if you happened to walk
past 52 Wall Street, chances are, you would see Tweedy
working at his cluttered desk - busy writing letters and
looking through company reports.

Tweedy's business was his life. And it was a successful one 
at that.

He owned a small niche brokerage house that specialized in
trading tiny illiquid securities. Day after day, Tweedy
scoured the market for publicly traded companies that had
between 50 and 150 shareholders on the record. He attended
their annual meetings, wrote down all the shareholders'
names and sent them personalized letters. His goal was to
find out who wanted to sell their shares and who wanted to
buy more. From there, Tweedy paired the buyers with the
sellers and brokered the deals himself.

It was a brilliant idea.

Bill Tweedy quickly became one of the only small- or
micro-cap brokers in New York - the "broker of last
resort," as he was called by the many shareholders who
couldn't trade their shares anywhere else. And although I
don't know how many small-cap stocks there were in 1920
relative to the number of major blue chip stocks, you can
bet there were thousands more - just like there are today.
That left Tweedy with a real monopoly in the market for
brokering small-cap trades.

Tweedy's business was successful throughout the 1920s and
into the 1930s. Then he got his big break... 

In the early 1930s, Tweedy developed a client relationship
with Benjamin Graham - the father of value investing. At
the time, Graham was a professor at Colombia University and 
had recently finished writing his now-famous books Security 
Analysis and The Intelligent Investor. If you aren't
familiar with Graham, I strongly suggest you read both of
these books. They are two of the best primers you'll ever
find on investing. But in case you don't have time to read
the books right now, I'll give you an abbreviated version
of his main points... 

Graham (who, among other things, is famous for teaching
Warren Buffett the ropes of value investing) proved you
could make a fortune investing in companies that were
selling for a huge discount to their intrinsic value. In
other words, if a company was trading far below what its
assets were worth (minus all liabilities - things like debt 
and accounts payable), Graham was confident that, over
time, the company's true worth would be discovered... and
anyone who invested while it was cheap would walk away much 
richer.

Think of it like this... if you went to a flea market and
saw a rare three-legged 1937D Buffalo nickel selling for
$900, you would buy it - knowing that the real value of the 
nickel was somewhere between $3,000 and $4,000. In other
words, if you sold it later and ONLY got the nickel's fair
value, you would still make about 233% to 344% on your
investment.

Not a bad deal, right?

Well, that's exactly the philosophy that Graham used to buy 
shares of a company. He looked for bargains - companies
selling for 60% to 70% LESS than they were worth. And it
just so happened that many of the small, illiquid companies 
Tweedy tracked fit Graham's "value" model simply because
they received no coverage on Wall Street and were
undervalued.

Thanks to their shared investment strategy, Tweedy quickly
became Graham's "go-to" broker. And Graham became Tweedy's
largest customer - so big that he moved his office right
next to Graham's office on 52 Wall Street so they could
work together more efficiently.

Over the years, Tweedy's business grew. Howard Browne (who
started his career as a runner on Wall Street at the ripe
old age of 16) became Tweedy's partner in 1945. And the
company slowly grew from a simple brokerage house (with
about $88,000 in capital) to a full-fledged investment
advisory business... that currently manages over $10
billion in assets.

Although Tweedy, Browne is a large money manager today (not 
the same small niche broker it was in 1920), one thing has
NOT changed in its 84-year history. The company still looks 
to buy stocks that are trading for huge discounts to their
real worth.

Here's how it's done... 

One of the surest ways to spot an undervalued stock is to
look at its price relative to the value of its assets. If a 
company is priced LESS than its assets are worth, you want
to own the stock. It is undervalued. And you want to stay
away from the companies that are selling for a huge premium 
to their asset value.

So how can you tell if a company is cheap relative to its
assets?

The easiest way is to scan the market for companies that
have a low price-to-book value. A company's book value is
its net asset value minus its intangible assets, current
liabilities, long-term debt and equity issues. Divide the
market-cap by the book value and you get the price-to-book
ratio.

If a company has a P/B value under 1, it is said to be
undervalued. And if a company has a P/B value above 1, it
is selling for a premium.

You want to own stocks that are undervalued and have room
to grow. Historically, these are stocks that provide
investors with the highest returns. For instance... 

Tweedy, Browne looked at all the stocks trading on the
major indexes from 1970 through 1981 that had a market cap
of at least $1 million and traded for no more than 140% of
book value. They ranked the 7,000 companies into nine
groups - ranging from those that were overvalued (trading
between 120% and 140% of book value) to those that were
undervalued (trading between 0% and 30% of book value).
What they found was incredible.

The lower the P/B ratio was, the higher the returns you
could expect - without fail.

Stocks that traded between 120% and 140% of book value rose 
an average of 15.7% in a single year. The stocks that only
traded for 80% to 100% of book value rose 18.5%. And the
truly undervalued stocks, those trading between 30% and 0%
of book value, rose an average of 30% a year.

That's pretty impressive when you consider the S&P 500 only 
returns you about 8.5% a year. And in dollar terms the
numbers are equally impressive.

If you had invested $1,000 in all the companies trading for 
30% of book value or less in 1970 (and rolled that money
over each year into the next group of stocks that were
trading for 30% of book value or less) it would have been
worth $23,298 by 1982. That same $1,000 invested in the S&P 
500 would have grown to $2,662. In other words... 

By investing in undervalued stocks (those trading for 30%
of book value or less), you can expect to make about nine
times more money than simply investing in the S&P 500.

Who said investing was hard?

Best regards,

James Boric
for The Daily Reckoning

P.S. James Boric is the editor of Penny Stock Fortunes, in
which he seeks out solid penny stocks at a great value. A
natural math whiz, James spent years studying the
strategies of investors like John Templeton and Warren
Buffett...  and refined them into what he calls the CXS
Money Multiplier System. Using his proprietary method,
James has lead his readers to substanstial gains in a
surprisingly short amount of time - the trademark of penny
stocks.

For more valuable insights from Mr. Boric click the link
below. 

http://www.agora-inc.com/reports/MST/liverb08

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