I am not a fan of Warren Buffett.  I don’t dislike the guy.  I admire this investing record.  But I think of him not as a genius investor, but more as an idiot savant.  It’s not like he grew up as a poor child and made it big as an adult.  His father was Congressman Howard Buffett, so I don’t think Warren grew up disadvantaged.

I think of Warren Buffett as a savant because he has correctly deduced that the way to make long term investment gains is to buy good companies, in good industries, and hold.  Companies like Coke and Dairy Queen have done well over the long term for him (I’m a health nut, so I don’t use any of their products, but that’s not the point).

I think he’s an idiot for two of his recent philosophical positions.

First, a few months ago, and then again at the annual Berkshire shareholder’s meeting last week, he stated that high income earners like him should pay more tax.  Personally, I believe that higher taxes are always a bad idea, because more revenue allows government to spend more.  Mr. Buffett keeps telling the story of how he pays a lower rate of tax than his secretary, even though he earns millions of dollars a year.

He’s an idiot for making this comparison, and here’s a simple example to illustrate this point:

Let’s assume I own shares in a company.  The company earns $1 million in profit, and the corporation pays taxes of $250,000.  The company then distributes the remaining $750,000 in dividends to the shareholder (me).  I pay tax of 25% on the dividends I got, or 25% of $750,000 = $187,500.

Mr. Buffett would say “see, it’s not fair, I only paid 25% tax on my income (from dividends), but my secretary has to pay tax of 30% on their income; it’s not fair!”  Yes, but while I only paid 25%, the corporation also paid 25% before they distributed the money to me.  On $1 million in profit, the corporation paid $250,000, and I paid $187,500, for total taxes paid of $437,500, or 43.75%, which is more than what a secretary is paying.

And yes, I just made up the tax rates, but you get the point: you can’t just look at personal tax rates on dividends or capital gains in isolation.

If Uncle Warren really thinks he should pay more in taxes, great.  Send a cheque to your pal Obama; I’m sure he’ll cash it.  My issue is that Warren Buffett believes that the government knows better than me what I should do with my money.  That’s what taxes are: a forced redistribution of wealth.  The government takes from the taxpayer, and gives that money to someone else.

I believe we should help those less fortunate than ourselves.  I agree that the income disparity between the rich and the poor is a serious problem, and will lead to continued social unrest.  But higher taxes are not the answer.  50% of Americans are net tax recipients, so of course they want more taxation of the rich.  The new top guy in France wants to tax the rich more.  Everyone wants to milk the golden goose, but you can’t milk a goose.  But I digress.

The second silly think Mr. Buffett said this week is that gold is bad (I’m paraphrasing here).  You can watch the video, but basically Charlie Munger, vice chairman of Berkshire Hathaway said “I think gold is a great thing to sew into your garments if you’re a Jewish family in Vienna in 1939, but I think civilized people don’t buy gold. They invest in productive businesses.”  Mr. Buffett appears to agree, but again the idiot savant totally misses the point.

Yes, I agree, we should all invest in productive businesses, because that’s what increases real wealth.  But what do you do with your profits?  Where do you put your wealth in the interim between when you sell a business and buy a new one?

Even Mr. Buffet agrees that fiat money is doomed to failure, but his solution is to buy productive companies.  Fine, but that does not solve the fiat money problem.

An esteemed libertarian back in 1948 wrote an essay arguing that paper currency must be backed by gold, or something tangible, or else we have no freedom.  To quote him:

But when you recall that one of the first moves by Lenin, Mussolini and Hitler was to outlaw individual ownership of gold, you begin to sense that there may be some connection between money, redeemable in gold, and the rare prize known as human liberty.

Also, when you find that Lenin declared and demonstrated that a sure way to overturn the existing social order and bring about communism was by printing press paper money, then again you are impressed with the possibility of a relationship between a gold-backed money and human freedom.

… The subject of a Hitler or a Stalin is a serf by the mere fact that his money can be called in and depreciated at the whim of his rulers. That actually happened in Russia a few months ago, when the Russian people, holding cash, had to turn it in — 10 old rubles and receive back one new ruble.

… Under such conditions the individual citizen is deprived of freedom of movement. He is prevented from laying away purchasing power for the future. He becomes dependent upon the goodwill of the politicians for his daily bread. Unless he lives on land that will sustain him, freedom for him does not exist.

That’s the problem with fiat money.  The government, at any time, can print more, which makes everything in circulation worth that much less.  I work hard and earn and save $100, but with money printing, leading to inflation, the government can easily turn my $100 in purchasing power into $90, or $9, or nothing.  That’s the problem, and that’s why paper currency needs to be backed by something that can’t be printed, so that government’s cannot rob their citizens of their purchasing power.

It’s a great essay; it’s called Human Freedom Rests on Gold Redeemable Money, and it was written in 1948 by the U.S. Congressman from Nebraska, the Hon. Howard Buffett, Warren’s father.

If currency was backed by gold (or silver, or oil, or seashells, or anything that can’t be conjured out of thin air) it would be very difficult, if not impossible, for governments to finance bank bailouts, and wars.  We would not be in Afghanistan, or Iraq, or anywhere else, because we could not afford to be there.

It’s that simple.

Does that make Mr. Buffett Jr. and idiot?  No, I suspect he fully understands the importance of gold, but he wants to stay on the friendly side of the powers that be, so he floats these silly statements to soften up the public.  Judging by the recent chart of gold, it appears to be working:

Gold’s three year up trend is over, and the $1,584 close for gold on Friday puts us back where we were in the middle of December, 2011 (but not as low as the $1,525 level we hit briefly at the end of year).

If the $1,525 level holds (and I’m betting it will), this could be the low level for the year, and a great buying opportunity.

That’s why I did some buying this week.  Here’s what I bought:

I bought some blue chips, like:

AEM.TO – Agnico-Eagle Mines Ltd.

RGL.TO – Royal Gold, Inc.

SLW.TO – Silver Wheaton Corp.
G.TO – Goldcorp Inc.

I also took a flyer on some junior stocks that will either double in value or crash and burn, including:

My plan is to watch these carefully, but to also gradually take profits.  In this market there are no long term, ten year holds.

So, if we have two or three decent up days, I will likely do covered writes on the blue chips like

I will sell some current or next month, slightly out of the money call options.  If the stock weakens, great, I can repurchase the call options at a lower price, and lower my cost base.  If the stock goes way up, my calls will get called, and I lose the stock, but I pocket the profit, and then deploy the cash on further weakness.

That’s the plan, subject to change.

And my apologies to Mr. Buffett Jr. for buying gold stocks……..

Thanks for reading, and see you next week.

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Buy in May? Or Bye Bye in May?

by JDH on May 5, 2012

As we all know, it is conventional wisdom to Sell in May and Go Away.  The reasons are simple: earnings reporting season is ending, and as the weather in New York and Toronto improves, traders spend more time on the golf course, and at the cottage, and less time moving the markets, so it’s prudent to park your cash and re-enter the markets as the summer is ending.

It’s hard to argue with that sentiment this week, which included the first four days of May, as the TSX dropped almost 3%, the S&P 500 was down 2.44%, and the DOW dropped 1.44%.  Not a great start to the month. The Dow appears to have stalled, with significant resistance around the March top:

Oil was down 5.68% this week, and is now down 0.31% on the year, which would appear to indicate we are not in a booming recovery.

Gold declined just under 1% this week, but is still up just under 5% on the year.

The gold chart is the opposite of the Dow chart; there is obvious support, going back to the start of the year, around the $1,625 level, a level briefly touched on Friday before gold ended the day slightly higher.  Successive downtrends have been broken.  Since the $1,625 level has been tested five times in the last two months, and has not been significantly broken, I’m of the view that likely the bottom for the year is in.

In other words, buy in the May, not bye bye and go away in May.

Of course a further correction is always possible, particularly if the general market tanks and forces a flight to liquidity where everything gets sold and cashed in.  But for now, selective buying makes sense.

As mentioned last week, some of the big gold stocks, like AEM.TO – Agnico-Eagle Mines Ltd. are coming to life:

So the plan remains the same: pick the stocks you like, particularly explorers and producers that are well financed, and are potential take over targets, or like Agnico-Eagle that also pay a dividend.  Place your stink bids, and on down days, accumulate.  Unless gold drops significantly through $1,625, it’s a safe bet, I believe.

And props to MetalMeister over on the Buy High Sell Higher Forum for pointing out the article by Bix Weir pointing out that the smart players are likely accumulating physical silver at $30 and under.  I agree.  Comex and the paper markets are a rigged game, and the only way to beat it is to accumulate the real stuff.

So why are stocks a good idea?  I like physical, but the stocks are so beaten down, even with prices higher than a year ago, that they are now so undervalued that some players may begin switching from physical to stocks for more leverage.

I’m not selling anything, but I intend to continue deploying cash over the coming weeks.

Thanks for reading, enjoy the good weather, and see you next week.

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The Big Mistake

April 28, 2012

As I write this post on Saturday morning, the memory of last night’s Blue Jays baseball game is fresh in my mind.  With two out in the top of the ninth, Blue Jays in the lead, a routine ground ball was hit to the Blue Jay’s star rookie third baseman, Brett Lawrie, (the only Canadian [...]

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An Apple a Day?

April 21, 2012

Rick Ackerman publishes the Rick’s Picks blog and website, and this week he asked an intriguing question: will Apple Inc. signal the top of the market?  In other words, is the recent run-up on Apple similar to the over-hyped valuations we saw just before the dot com bubble burst at the start of the century? [...]

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Friday the 13th

April 14, 2012

For those of you who read these musings when they are published on Saturday morning, yesterday was Friday the 13th.  (If you read these brilliant examples of sardonic wit after Saturday, why do you wait? I try to have my weekly ramblings published by 9:00 am on Saturday morning). In my part of Southern Ontario, [...]

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The Un-Jobs Report

April 7, 2012

Happy Easter.  I started my Easter weekend with a day off on Friday, but since my internal clock is programmed to wake me up around 6:00 am every day, weekday, weekend, or holiday, I slept in but was still up at 7:00 am on Friday, with the rest of the family still fast asleep.  Since [...]

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End of the Quarter, Not the End of the World

March 31, 2012

The theme around here, for the last few weeks, has centered around the long expected and predicted collapse of the markets, and perhaps the world.  A month ago I wrote about The End of the World – Part 1, followed by The End of the World – Part 2.  I then questioned why the market [...]

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Is it just me, or did nothing happen this week?

March 24, 2012

It isn’t just me, is it? Nothing did happen this week.  By the numbers: DOW down 1.16% Gold down 1.01% Oil down 1.65% But even after that down week, years to date everything is up: S&P 500 up 11.09% DOW up 7.06% Oil up 6.66% Gold up 4.83% I find it amazing that after massive [...]

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Gold Up, Gold Stocks Down – Why?

March 17, 2012

Let us pause during this beautiful late winter period (where in my corner of Ontario the temperature has bumped up against 20 degrees Celsius, which is great) and return to the eternal question: why is gold going up, and gold stocks are going down?  To the charts, batman: Here’s gold, over the last two years: [...]

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The End of the World, Part 2

March 10, 2012

Last week, in the The End of the World, Part 1, I discussed the various reasons why the financial world might be ending, or be seriously damaged, this week.  Apparently there was no cause for worry; all is fine; never better. The United States Department of Labor issued their Employment Information Summary on Friday, and [...]

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