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**Christenson Wealth Management Weekly Commentary 5/14/2012

The Markets

Even the smartest guy in the room sometimes makes mistakes.

Jamie Dimon, CEO of the huge U.S. bank JP Morgan, has been called the smartest guy in the room for his ability to effectively steer the bank through the economic crisis. And, while most of the other big U.S. banks have tarnished reputations, Dimon’s firm was the one that stood out from the crowd.

Unfortunately, that all changed last week.

In a hastily arranged conference call with investors, Dimon revealed that the bank lost $2 billion in just the past six weeks on “bets aimed at shielding the bank from the market fallout of Europe's deepening mess,” according to The Wall Street Journal. These “bets” lost money due to “unusual movements in the relationships between various derivative indexes focused on investment-grade and junk-bond corporate debt, both in the U.S. and Europe,” according to the Journal.

**Christenson Wealth Management Weekly Commentary 1/30/2012

Weekly Commentary
January 30, 2012

The Markets

At its most basic level, a trade takes place when a buyer is willing to buy at a certain price and a seller is willing to sell at that price. Both parties could be smart, experienced, and looking at the same data, yet somehow one party thinks it’s a good price to buy and the other thinks it’s a good price to sell.

Last week, several news items represented good examples of how investors could look at the same data and draw different conclusions. Consider these:

  1. Gross domestic product rose at a 2.8 percent pace in the October through December period.

Bullish investors say that’s up from 1.8 percent the previous quarter and the fastest pace in a year and a half.

Bearish investors say it’s less than the 3.0 percent growth expected by economists and most of the growth was due to inventory accumulation.

Source: MarketWatch

Christenson Wealth Management Weekly Commentary 12/5/2011

Weekly Commentary

December 5, 2011

The Markets

Politicians may struggle to work together, but at least the world’s central bankers can.

At 8:00 a.m. EST on November 30, the Federal Reserve released a statement that sent worldwide financial markets skyrocketing. Here’s the first paragraph of the statement:

The Bank of Canada, the Bank of England, the Bank of Japan, the European Central Bank, the Federal Reserve, and the Swiss National Bank are today announcing coordinated actions to enhance their capacity to provide liquidity support to the global financial system. The purpose of these actions is to ease strains in financial markets and thereby mitigate the effects of such strains on the supply of credit to households and businesses and so help foster economic activity. 

Weekly Commentary November 28, 2011

 

The Markets

“It’s a small world after all.”

Living in an age of jet travel, the internet and mobile communication has its advantages. It makes our world of 7 billion people seem a bit smaller since we’re just one plane ride or “one boot of the computer” away from connecting with anyone in the world.

But, along with the good comes the bad.

 

Christenson Wealth Management Weekly Commentary 11/21/2011

The Markets

“Printing money is really just a softer method of default, because it effectively converts the meaning of default from ‘getting less than 100% of the currency you were owed’ to ‘getting all the currency you were owed, but ending up with less than 100 percent of the purchasing power you expected.’”

Weekly Commentary 11/14/2011

The Markets

Greece and Italy just dumped their political leaders and are hoping that new leadership will calm the financial markets and drive important structural reform.

One of the insightful bits of investing wisdom is that you don’t have to recoup a loss using the same investment that caused the loss. In other words, it’s okay to sell a loser and redeploy the money in another investment that may have a better chance of going up in value. That seems to be what Greece and Italy are doing with their leadership change.

Celebrating 11/11/11 @ 11:11:11 AM

Friday 11/11/11 at 11:11:11 AM. 

What a blast!  Thanks to all our friends who joined us for a little social time. 

Put 12/12/12 on your calendar... we'll be doing it again next year!

Celebrating a unique day!

Weekly Commentary November 7, 2011

The Markets

This Europe problem just won’t go away and it’s keeping the financial markets on edge.

Weekly Commentary October 31, 2011

The Markets

After 14 summits in 21 months, have European leaders finally solved their sovereign debt problem? Judging by the stock market’s reaction, you might think the answer is yes.

In marathon sessions last week, European leaders agreed on a new, three-point deal to stave off a deeper debt crisis. The deal includes:

 

Weekly Commentary October 24, 2011

 The Markets

“Good news is good and bad news is bad, but a lack of bad news can be good, at least for investors,” so wrote Vito Racanelli in the current issue of Barron’s.

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