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In an attempt to better understand the ownership structure of FIH.U, I used Claud to try and build a visual. I welcome feedback on what I don't have correct, or what is missing. Overall it was a somewhat frustrating experience, Claud kept putting boxes in bizarre places and had lines crossing each other all over the place and was writing text on top of each other. Makes me wonder if ADBE really is going to die quickly due to AI. Perhaps I am bad at prompting, or perhaps Claud isn't the best AI for this task.
- Today
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And there we go again with the green Lincoln Memorial reflecting pool! - It's killing me! - It's only about USD 16 million, none of them mine!
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Whats your target price for SOXX in the next 3 months? These options look very expensive to me.
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First, some context. When buying shares, I mostly open 1% positions, and might increase that to about a 3% position from buying. I tend to shrink positions when they get above 10-15%. I have way more positions than most here, I think. (I also don't work, so am averse to losing money.) When buying options, most positions start out at around 0.33%, though sometimes I'll do up to 1%. That said, for me, buying is completely opportunistic. Most of the time, I have 0% long options in my portfolio, and I'd guess I do one such trade a year. So maybe, at cost, I'd have less than 1% of the portfolio in options. I'm typically looking for something that is undervalued with low IV, mostly because I'm betting on a path to fair value, not a random walk with high volatility resulting in a payout, so I want to pay as little for the option as possible. I'll often roll up, potentially making the position bigger than 1%. Two recent ones that didn't pay out was buying Bell leaps when it first fell to the C$35 range, and Equinox Gold around $9 before gold spiked. Before that was Citi below $40 where I hit the bottom perfectly, and eventually after some rolls incorrectly closed in the low $60s. That 0.33% became about 5%. My biggest winner was UAN. I opened the 0.33% position when it was at $25. I had 3-6 month out expiries (not LEAPs) and rolled a bunch, and the underlying hit $180 or something. I sold out on the way down at about $120. At the peak, I think the position was around 40% of my portfolio (about 80% of the initial portfolio size, 320x the original outlay, though probably those numbers don't triangulate. I don't feel like doing any math). I think in the end, I think I made about 140x the original outlay. Wallstreetbets gets a lot of justifiable mockery, but it did drive home one thing for me--with long call options, there's potentially a lot of value in aiming for the fences because a small position can become huge, and psychologically it's much easier holding an extremely high-risk position if it has grown to become that. (Note: I'm not saying it's rational to believe this. Rather, I'm saying that if I come up with a strategy I think is rational but is hard psychologically to execute because the numbers get big, it's easier to do so if those big numbers are a result of massive gains. And generally, my strategy with long calls is to try to get massive gains.)
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I see it as buying insurance on the portfolio with a decent chance of printing some money. Soxx is the most obvious one in my opinion.
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Once again, Jon Stewart lays out how Cubs was so right and Trump and Vance did not fuck up negotiations with Iran after blowing the hell out of them. Art of the Deal, baby...Art of the Deal! Cheers!
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Metlen announced a €600m buyback https://www.investegate.co.uk/announcement/rns/metlen-energy-metals-plc--mtln/commencement-of-share-buyback-programme/9630761
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How do you size the options? How much is a big bet, or a regular one, and what size of the portfolio options occupy? Thanks
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Wanderer started following Fairfax - A Deep Dive on Management and Culture
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Well it's quite unlikely they'd be growing much next few years with the soft market. If they grew 3%PA I'd be happy. There's a good chance it stays flat. Hence that won't take up much capital. It boils down to additional acquisitions versus paying a dividend back up to the parent for the share buybacks. Another possibility is they are holding that cash there in the subs, to facilitate the minority buyouts when appropriate and available.
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I bought at around $50 and sold at $65 because at the time I was like I don’t want commodities in the portfolio, sigh
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Yeah, I've had the same experience. I think long puts are particularly difficult for a few reasons. First, volatility skew makes them "overpriced". Second, as they go in the money, the time value gets crushed faster than with calls. Third, when the security trades in "your direction", a 1% move becomes a larger absolute move with a call and a smaller absolute move with a put, which means every additional dollar gets easier with a call, and harder with a put. And finally, related to that last point, calls can rise to the moon, while puts have a maximum gain. So, if you get an extreme move in your favour, the impact with calls can be much higher. (e.g. back in the day, when Fairfax was fighting the shorts, while I sold early, I still made 30x on a small call position. If Fairfax had a roughly equivalent down move, I doubt it would've been even a 10x.) For me, the impact has been that I'll speculate with calls and short puts. But I'll almost never speculate with puts. (In this context for me, speculate means "make a directional bet hoping to get at least a 4x payoff if the stock moves in my direction.")
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Yep, particularly Ukraine. During the early invasion, there was a lot of discussion about "Ukraine gave up nukes for a guarantee of security from Russia". I'm sure every other country on the map made note of the implications.
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Fairfax - A Deep Dive on Management and Culture
RichardGibbons replied to Viking's topic in Fairfax Financial
Yeah, I agree with this. I think the main impact these issues have on my investing process are to assume, if Fairfax owns a company that I also own, that Fairfax will be quite willing to make a deal beneficial to them that screws me. So, I'd be less inclined to own a business that Fairfax owns than an equivalent business that Fairfax doesn't own. I guess one could argue that Atlas kind of fits that profile--nudging out minority shareholders at a price below intrinsic value. But I have no problem with that, because there was no competing bid, and because the price offered was reasonable when pegged against the stock's trading range at the time. So to me, that was completely kosher. Also, I guess the other change is that I now recognize that the Fairfax name (fair and friendly acquisitions) is marketing--neither reality nor an aspiration. It's all just data points forming my mental model of what Fairfax is. -
I trade options routinely and it's easy to make big money as long as you have the cajones. But, to your point I have failed on the latter (shorting the market). I stick with long calls and short puts on stocks that I like
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Add to LEN.B
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When did you stop tracking your returns?
Sloanes Teddy replied to Milu's topic in General Discussion
Glad to not be tracking this year. Ouch:) - Yesterday
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Lots of countries will develop nuclear weapons - Saudi Arabia (through Pakistan), South Africa (they have nuclear power already), South Korea (counter North Korea), Iran, Ukraine (longer term) and likely Europe down the road. This a clear result of the wars on Ukraine and Iran, imo. This is a result of the Neo imperialism that is going to be the next chapter in a global politics.
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How do you define cash flow? Last year they spent a bit less than the dividends from the insurance subsidiaries on buybacks. I think that’s a good estimate for FCF. The insurance companies still need capital to grow and their portfolio turnover shouldn’t have much to do with buybacks except to the extent it creates excess capital. This year they are allowed to dividend up $4b. So far this year they are on pace for over $2b of buybacks.
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@73 Reds you are liberal idealist at heart!...me too!..this is indeed the way things should be if man wasnt so tribal, paranoid, prone to think of others as lesser than, if nationalism wasn't such a powerful tribal force etc etc........I was the same until I spent time studying IR and while no social theory is perfect (the world is far too complicated and so ANY theoretical frameworks are always gross gross over simplifications of the real world) the IR theory that stands above the rest and has the best (though imperfect predictive power) is realism. The great tragedy of realism applied to the world is the end game inherent in it....global and regional powers are prone to war not because they are crazy...but because in anarchic system a state acting rationally acts in ways that trigger paranoia in its foe which sets of inevitable escalatory paranoia sometimes ending in something of a balancing stalemate but many times tipping over into something much worse a hot war.......we all know the phrase - sometimes the best defense is a good offense...well States come to that conclusion all the time and we get hot wars. The thing I find with liberal idealists is they want to divide the world neatly into "good guys who want peace" and "bad guys who want war." The great tragedy of realism is proving that the bloodiest wars in human history are rarely started by cartoonish villains rubbing their hands together in pure evil. They are usually started by terrified, highly rational leaders staring at a map, looking at trend lines, and concluding: "If we don't attack them today, they will destroy us tomorrow.".......Israel is terrified of the trend line with Iran's nuclear capability, they should be....as I said above that Iran is highly highly unlikely to ever use a nuclear weapon on Israel they want it as a deterrent....."unlikely" is doing alot of work here of course.....I'm 99.9% sure of this prediction....but if I handed you a revolver with a THOUSAND chambers in it and a bullet in one of them how comfortable would be putting it to your head and pulling the trigger? This is Israel's dilemma....and I'm very sympathetic to it.
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Yeah the higher yields go, the equity book has to do less and less for Fairfax to be a great investment from an already comfortable starting point. Additionally two of the biggest equity investments, Eurobank and TRS are positively geared to higher rates.
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As usual, for the most part I agree and do tend to look at look at things from a Western-centric POV. But this is because I believe our POV is largely correct and the best model for a free, prosperous, peaceful World. There is no reason to eliminate, cultures, customs, histories, alliances, religious practices, and fundamental beliefs as long as they don't threaten and infringe on the rights of others. History teaches us that this can largely be accomplished through deterrence but the exceptions like Iran have to be dealt with more directly unless we want another 47 years of fundamental fanaticism. For me its about time. Because of its success, the US has a unique role in the World. Nothing says the role can't be shared and in time it will.
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The odds are not great but payoff is asymmetrical . The Soxx looks very overextended with many crapola stocks mooning.
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I like this idea. Never thought about doing that.
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The 2-year note at 4.23% and rising seems awfully bullish for Fairfax. Especially with inflation break-evens, swaps and *yikes!* "truflation" all diving back to the harmless zone.. Seems kinda like a gift. I wonder if even Berkshire will give their government bill auction guy a bit of a break and let him buy some 1 and 2 year notes https://fred.stlouisfed.org/series/T5YIE https://fred.stlouisfed.org/series/T10YIE
