...amazing, kinda like an old economy - new economy thing. They essentially took out all the stocks we're bullish on and replaced them with stocks that shouldn't be owned at this point in time.
Regards, Frank P.
BTW: check this out - in yesterdays DR:
DOOMSDAY FOR WALL STREET? by Martin Weiss
As early as 1999 - with the greatest stock mania in history in full swing - subtle, but deeply disturbing, changes began to occur in corporate America and on Wall Street. The earnings reports issued by up to one-third of US companies just didn't add up.
To me, it was plain as day that huge expenses were being buried...mock sales were being pawned off as real revenues...and earnings were being grossly exaggerated. Many companies reporting minor losses were really bleeding like so many stuck pigs...and some companies reporting big profits were actually drowning in red ink.
When I analyzed their balance sheets, I realized debt levels were off the scale. They were up to their eyeballs in debts they never had a prayer of paying, and merrily borrowing still more every day.
Wall Street ratings on these companies totally ignored these "minor details" and hyped the stocks as "quintessential investment opportunities." Analysts must have known what I knew - and yet they awarded many of the most egregious, most questionable companies the most highly touted "buy" ratings, with the greatest hoopla and fanfare.
I could only assume that the analysts must have an ulterior motive for recommending these dogs. Every single one of the brokerage firms hyping these rickety companies had collected massive investment banking and consulting fees from them; had loaned them millions of dollars; or were vying for their future business.
It was the most massive breach of trust I had ever seen in my three decades as an investment analyst. Unsuspecting investors were being betrayed, bilked, and bamboozled. They thought they were buying the stock of great companies with great earnings. They thought brokerage analysts genuinely believed these companies had great potential.
But investors were really getting something VERY different: Lousy, high-debt, low-earnings stocks that greedy and amoral brokerage firms needed to sell to pump up their own investment banking revenues.
That meant trillions of dollars - the life savings and retirement plans of millions of Americans - were in extreme danger. And with the high-profile scandals and bankruptcy now plaguing Wall Street's most "reputable" firms, we're only just beginning to see the damage that has been wrought.
But there is still time to save yourself... * With the startling revelations about investor swindles at Wall Street mainstays like Merrill Lynch, Morgan Stanley, Salomon, and others...
* With a never-ending flow of massive, newly discovered, accounting lies by the likes of WorldCom (a $4.0 billion profit overstatement), Merck ($14 billion revenue overstatement), Global Crossing (losses of $55 billion), and Tyco (probably around $30 billion)...
* And with the very real threat of a new wave of surprise bankruptcies like those at Williams, Kmart, and Adelphia, the trust millions of investors once had in our financial markets is rapidly vanishing. Investor confidence has plunged to 9/11 levels. Foreign investors are pulling out in droves. A wholesale, unbridled, uncontrollable panic is brewing.
This is not just a crash. It's a threat to our entire future - as investors, as citizens.
Maybe, if the crooked companies and brokers who have been exposed thus far were the only ones, the shock and bewilderment in the market would eventually subside.
Or maybe, if the companies recently filing for Chapter 11 were among the last of the "bad apples," we could see a light at the end of the tunnel. But no.
* So far, authorities have only released damning evidence against ONE major broker - Merrill Lynch. But they are conducting new investigations of widespread ratings fraud at a dozen major Wall Street Brokerages. And I have data indicating that at least 47 firms may be guilty.
* So far, we've only heard about accounting regularities at a handful of major corporations. But our surveys indicate that thousands may have engaged in similar practices.
* So far this year, we've seen bankruptcies at 104 publicly traded companies, a new record. But according to my numbers, 1,359 are now at risk of failure.
It will take months for all the accounting crimes to be exposed and for the companies battling bankruptcy to finally throw in the towel.
In the meantime, day by day, every new disclosure and failure will deepen the crisis of confidence.
But there's a limit to how much investors can take - an invisible psychological barrier that once violated, cannot be restored. This generation's trust in Wall Street - and its willingness to play the stock market game - will have been destroyed forever.
Who's going to help avert this dismal future?
I wish I could tell you that politicians in Washington are going to step in and stop the madness on Wall Street. But too many are afraid to be blamed for accelerating the coming crash or to lose their super- fat Wall Street campaign contributions.
I wish I could affirm that the major Wall Street firms will voluntarily mend themselves. Instead, even as they promise "never to do it again," they are deploying scores of high-powered lobbyists to squash any legislation that might force them to keep those promises. Case in point: Philip J. Purcell, CEO of Morgan Stanley Dean Witter, who has been lobbying feverishly to block attorney generals, like New York's Elliott Spitzer, from exposing the dirt at companies like his, Merrill Lynch, or others.
I wish I could tell you that the SEC is likely to expose and punish the wrongdoers, or institute harsh new regulations that guarantee your safety and fair treatment.
The sorry truth is that the SEC knew about the conflicts of interest for many years and did next to nothing. Indeed, as far back as 1992, a front-page Wall Street Journal article presented a clear description of wrongdoing on Wall Street, especially highlighting the shenanigans at none other than Morgan Stanley - the very same firm that's trying to squash anti-Wall Street actions today.
I wish I could tell you that even one, single, solitary brokerage firm would have the courage to step up to the plate and say, "You're right. We lied, cheated, and stole billions of dollars from unsuspecting investors. We all did it. Now let's throw the guilty behind bars."
But nobody's talking - even when they've been caught red-handed. Merrill Lynch CEO David Komansky, for example, fresh out of his settlement with Elliot Spitzer, pooh-poohed the entire scandal by blaming it all on "a few bad apple analysts."
Throughout Washington and Wall Street, no one seems to care that, with each denial, each obfuscation, and each lobbying attempt to derail ongoing investigations, they're convincing more and more investors that Wall Street is nothing more than a shell game.
Wall Street will never clean up its mess, the crisis of confidence will never end, and no one will ever be safe again until and unless investors like you take matters into your own hands and take action.
Here's what I recommend: We've identified some of the worst offending brokerage firms... firms whose names may even surprise you: Prudential, for example, ranked worst in terms of number of legal actions against the firm, compared to 17 other large retail firms in 1997- 2001 and failed to downgrade 2 failing companies to "sell" in 2002. And Ameritrade ranked second worst in terms of number of legal actions and according to the Weiss ratings system rated a "C-" for safety. But there are many more...
In fact, we call it the Brokerage Hall of Shame.
If you have even one, lonely, solitary dollar invested with any of the brokerages, I believe you should run - not walk - to the nearest phone or computer and close your account NOW! That one act - multiplied a million- fold - will be their ultimate punishment.
By getting your money out of brokerages that have the worst record of investor abuse, your money will be safe if they are slammed with massive arbitration claims and settlements.
That's important: More brokers go out of business because of judgments and settlements than for any other reason. And if you have an account with a failed broker, it may be frozen - and your money locked in losing positions - while the regulators and SIPC sort things out.
Plus, you'll be sending these brokerages a clear message: Clean up your act or else!
Where should your money go? Move your accounts to one of the brokers listed in our BROKERAGE HALL OF FAME. Fidelity, for example, ranked best in terms of fewest legal actions; rated B+ for safety. They've got low commissions and did not recommend failing companies. Again, not all brokerages are bad...
By moving your money immediately, you'll be rewarding firms that refused to trick you into junk stocks to earn investment banking fees - and you will help give them competitive power over dishonest firms.
Position yourself now to profit from the market's inevitable decline. No action you or I can ever take will stop the stock market from falling. That's already written in stone. Instead, make sure you have investments firmly in place that will help you profit from the decline. That way, when the market does hit rock bottom, you will join a powerful minority of investors with the wealth to buy up the best companies at the best time for the lowest prices.
Let me put this as bluntly as possible: The clock is ticking. Every day, more investors are becoming convinced - and rightly so - that Wall Street is a rigged game.
Unless faith is restored, this crisis of confidence will not only continue to spiral out of control, but it will doom the chances for an eventual market recovery. It's probably too late to prevent the downward spiral. No one has that power. But if we don't act immediately, it may also be too late to prevent a more permanent destruction of confidence.
Never forget: The biggest profit opportunity we will have is to buy good companies at the right time for a fraction of their peak value. But how can we do that safely if the entire market is still a cesspool of corruption and deception?
Regards,
Martin Weiss, for The Daily Reckoning |