| The board will discuss aspects of the epic American credit and bond bubble and it's ramifications for investors. Emphasis will be on how to profit from (or at least survive) a bond bear market and/or a credit collapse.  Basic entry prerequistes to take this lab: 1. the knowledge that bond prices move inversely to interest rates. 2. an understanding that bonds can lose value if credit conditions deteriorate. 
 Food for thought:
 
 "A sound banker, alas, is not one who forsees danger and avoids it, but one who, when he is ruined, is ruined in a conventional and orthodox way along with his fellows, so that no one can really blame him".
 - John Maynard Keynes
 
 Lab tools:
 
 Good glossary:
 investinginbonds.com
 
 Treasury yields:
 bondtalk.com
 
 Key bubble related charts and graphics from the Hoisington Management presentation at Grant Conference, Nov. 13, 2003:
 Message 19632973
 
 Terrific economic data base and graphic capacity:
 economagic.com
 
 Daily Treasury Statement; withholding tax receipts:
 fms.treas.gov
 
 Key measure of cheap loosey goosey easy credit to consumers; mortgage application index, purchase index, refi index, out every Wed. I'm looking for a chart/graphic:
 mbaa.org
 
 TrimTabs (Charles Biderman) weekly liquidity report:
 trimtabs.com
 
 AMG mutual fund flows:
 amgdata.com
 
 Investment Institute, mutual fund cash levels come out end of month:
 ici.org
 
 IPO calendar from CBS Marketwatch:
 cbs.marketwatch.com
 
 Fed repurchase pool:
 bullandbearwise.com
 
 Some original thinking on how fed repos impact markets:
 financialsense.com
 
 St. Louis Fed data and updates: treasure trove:
 research.stlouisfed.org
 
 research.stlouisfed.org
 
 Fed govt securities bought outright (monetized):
 ny.frb.org
 
 Federal Reserve flow of funds data:
 federalreserve.gov
 
 Foreign transactions in US securities (Updated on the 11th business day of each month, with a 1.5 month lag.) in 2004: Jan 16, Feb 17, Mar 15, Apr 15, May 17, June 15, July 16, Aug 16, Sept 16, Oct 18, Nov 16 and Dec 15.
 treas.gov
 
 Bureau of Economic Analysis:
 bea.doc.gov
 
 Federal Reserve Economic Data: St. Louis Fed
 research.stlouisfed.org
 
 Bond Market Asso.;data and reporting on the credit markets:
 bondmarkets.com
 
 National Asso. of Realtors; housing bubble data:
 realtor.org
 
 Tokyo-Mitsubishi economic and retail data:
 btmna.com
 
 Baltic freight index(BDIY):
 quote.bloomberg.com
 
 JOC-ECRI industrial commodities index:
 joc.com
 
 LME metal inventories, another good "maladjusted economy" indicator:
 metalprices.com
 
 Average world steel transaction prices (monthly):
 meps.co.uk
 
 Bureau of Labor Statistics, general:
 bls.gov
 
 Bureau of Labor Statistics, with focus on food and energy inflation:
 data.bls.gov
 
 Life in the trenches with purchasing managers (Purchasing.com):
 manufacturing.net
 
 Fed fund forwards:
 cbot.com
 
 Yields, spreads, curves, and for a good time call, etc:
 bonds-online.com
 
 Committment of traders (COT) reports:
 commitmentsoftraders.com
 
 Prudent Bear commentaries; key on Doug Noland's Credit Bubble Bulletin (updated weekends), Marshall Auerback, and Richard Duncan:
 prudentbear.com
 
 Richard Duncan's extraordinary new book, "The Dollar Crisis". My book review is at the Amazon site. amazon.com
 
 Financial Sense Online (Jim Puplava), some very good weekend interviews and links to other sites:
 netcastdaily.com
 
 Excellent commentary and graphics from Contrary Investor:
 contraryinvestor.com
 
 Bill Fleckenstein:
 moneycentral.msn.com
 
 Bank Credit Analyst: Although I am no fan of BCA's cavalier, la de dah approach (analysis) to bubble economics (everything is always a "mini-bubble" to them) they do present powerful and informative charts. Take special note of their tracking of "dollar based liquidity".
 bcaresearch.com
 
 Pimco bonds:
 pimco.com
 
 Levy Economics Institute:
 levy.org
 
 Futures market quotes:
 sites2.barchart.com
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