Skip to content

Our Ideas

We believe in transparency and accountability with respect to the ideas and the thought process behind our asset allocation

photo

Market Views

On track, not the midnight express

Before heading to Turkey for the IMF annual meetings, let’s do a little reckoning of views and where things are going (from a big picture standpoint). Also, what are the themes that seem to be shaping this next IMF meetings this weekend, in terms of the debates going on and the agendas put together by read more

Martin Anidjar | October 01, 2009

Market Views

All fell, all came back, some do better

The table below illustrates a few interesting points about how different investments and strategies fared through the crisis and the ongoing recovery. The table below shows the price performance of the efficient instruments we would use to gain exposure to each of those sectors. It is by no means a complete list, just a few read more

Martin Anidjar | September 16, 2009

Market Views

How to protect your portfolio from a depreciating dollar?

In the last three days there has been a sharp depreciation of the dollar against the euro and the pound, and to a lesser degree against the reai and won. This re-ignition of the debate about whether the dollar will continue to dominate the global financial system. Our opinion is that there is no natural read more

Martin Anidjar | September 10, 2009

Market Views

The costs of simplification in asset allocation

There was an article in yesterdays’ Wall Street journal that questioned the idea that stocks are a better long term investment than bonds. Moreover, it pointed out the importance of other types of assets such as commodities. This is part of a broader debate on asset allocation, pushing away from stocks. Many of the ideas in read more

Martin Anidjar | September 04, 2009

Market Views

Neither heroes, not turtles

The last three days of market selloffs (-3.4% in the S&P500, -4.4% in Europe, or -4.2% for the BRICs) has generated a debate on whether we are in for a more serious pullback. Some are saying that the rally had not been for real nor based on fundamental improvements. Numbers like “another -10/-20%” are being read more

Martin Anidjar | September 02, 2009

Market Views

Is EM becoming a barbell trade of an Asset Class

Maybe this is not the time to try to think through the medium-term outlook of an asset class (but it’s easier to resume writing on this than to comment on the 90% tax on bonuses…). But I think one of the most interesting questions to think about is which countries will fare better than others. read more

Martin Anidjar | March 20, 2009

Market Views

Will Ben get us all before Sam gets some of us?

The Fed said they are prepared to buy US Treasuries outright, which is a policy action that can be analyzed from many angles, some more complicated than others. The bottom line is that it increases the probability that we end up paying for the current fiscal expansion and balance sheet problems through the inflation tax read more

Martin Anidjar | January 29, 2009

Market Views

Argentina: swap for locals, cash for thee…?

This posting will be a short and fairly idiosyncratic note on Argentina’s debt management. Nothing more than that, maybe less… According to an article yesterday in Ambito Financiero, the Argentine government is about to get going on its financing needs for 2009. Apparently, a swap of ‘prestamos garantizados’ (PGs) for local debt linked to floating rate Badlar read more

Martin Anidjar | January 19, 2009

Market Views

Bernanke vs Krugman and other thoughts

After a week being back from my favorite southern country (Uruguay), I realize not much has changed in G7’s policy stance. At the same time, markets away from the US banking system seem to be normalizing. I think US policy continues to pollute the picture with its lack of clear direction/diagnostics. Every macro tool available read more

Martin Anidjar | January 13, 2009

Market Views

The recession business: not 1930s style

Last week I attended a seminar by Nobel Prize Winner Bob Lucas, on the current international credit crisis. He gave a very big picture view based on a comparison to the 1930s crisis. His bottom line was that as opposed to the Fed response in 1931, this time around the Fed policy response is not read more

Martin Anidjar | December 17, 2008

(Articles 81-90 of 92) Next | Previous

Baffin Advisors