John Dutemple will sell, from a family account, Harmony Gold (HMY) after market open Thursday, January 22.
Sinquefield to Speak at the St. Louis Club Thursday, February 26
St. Louis investor, philanthropist, political backer, and author Rex Sinquefield will be speaking before the CFA Society of St. Louis next month.
I will be attending. There are a limited number of guest tickets available. If you would like to go as my guest please let me know at john@comptonadvisors.com. The cost is $35 - free for our current clients. Gentlemen, note the dress code below. Please let me know by February 16 if you are interested.
Date: Thursday, February 26, 2015
Topic: An Inquiry into the Nature and Causes of the Wealth of States
Guest Speaker: Rex Sinquefield
About the talk:
Location: Saint Louis Club
Garage Parking is Complimentary
Cost: Members free, Guests $35
I will be attending. There are a limited number of guest tickets available. If you would like to go as my guest please let me know at john@comptonadvisors.com. The cost is $35 - free for our current clients. Gentlemen, note the dress code below. Please let me know by February 16 if you are interested.
Date: Thursday, February 26, 2015
Topic: An Inquiry into the Nature and Causes of the Wealth of States
Guest Speaker: Rex Sinquefield

About the talk:
Rex Sinquefield will discuss the impact of state taxes on capital flight. Over $2 trillion of interstate wealth has migrated from high-tax to low-tax areas.
Time: Networking/Registration 11:30am, Lunch/Program 12-1:15pm
Location: Saint Louis Club
7701 Forsyth Blvd., Clayton, MO, 63105
16th Floor
Men are required to wear a sport coat.
16th Floor
Men are required to wear a sport coat.
Cost: Members free, Guests $35
Advisors' Roundup - January 23, 2015
Here's what's on my mind this week:
Forcasting is hard - even for the Great and PowerfulOZ Fed:
Compton Advisors: If These Guys Can't Get Predictions Right . . .
So maybe you should stay diversified:
Basson Asset
Even a little basic diversification works well in the long run:
The Reformed Broker
Forcasting is hard - even for the Great and Powerful
Compton Advisors: If These Guys Can't Get Predictions Right . . .
So maybe you should stay diversified:
Basson Asset
Even a little basic diversification works well in the long run:
The Reformed Broker
Tax Season Means Tax Scams
Heading up the list are callers claiming to be from the IRS and demanding immediate payment. Stereotypes about the IRS aside, this is not something they are going to do.
Here's the IRS's video from their YouTube channel:
Here's the IRS's video from their YouTube channel:
If These Guys Can't Get Predictions Right - What Chance Do You Have?
"The best way to predict the future is to create it"- Peter Drucker
The Fed.
Think of the brain-power, the computing muscle, the insight, the sheer vested interest the Federal Reserve, as guardians of the monetary policy of the richest country in the world, must have at its disposal to make economic forecasts . . .
Now consider how wrong those forecasts have been.
Dr. James Bullard, President of the St. Louis Federal Reserve Bank, spoke Friday before the CFA Society of Chicago. Central to his presentation, Ghosts & Forecasts, was an explaination of how FMOC forecasts are made, and how (in)accurate they have been in the last few years. The Fed's mandate focuses on two measures - employment and inflation. Consider inflation:
The FMOC has undershot inflation for the last two years - after overshooting it in 2011. Even using its broadest predictor, the Fed was right only twice in the last six years.
Bullard's caveat is that, like Ebeneezer Scrooge and The Ghost of Christmas Present (The Ghost in the presentation's title), their mandate is to predict that which will come to past if the present course is unaltered. The Fed's job is to do that altering if call for, but consider that the Fed's inflation policy target was higher than their highest prediction even. Scary to think how off they would have been if they hadn't been driving policy at the same time.
Unemployment predictions were a little better, only missing half the time and only about as dismal as private forecasts (small comfort). GDP forecasts have been more accurate the last two years.
Click here for the entire presentation
All financial decisions involve prediction, explicit or implicit, yours or someone else's. Because they are part & parcel of portfolio allocation, it's important to recognize their limitations and to temper your reliance on them coming true. This is why you save as much as you can. This is why it is wise to avoid 'sure things' - they don't exist. This is why diversification is prudent move. Because if the Fed can't get economic predictions right, if 'Blue Chip' economists can't forecast employment, are you going to bet your future on your or your broker's guess?