Forbes here says "Gurus Buy Blue Chips, Unwind Bearish Bets" and tells us that the gurus at Marketocracy are all getting long.
http://www.forbes.co...artner=yahootix
Strangely, one of the very consistent marketocracy guru I know (J Navin) is increasing his bearish bets, not reducing. I would expect others of his level are doing the same.
If you want to be a guru, stop being bearish
Started by
greenie
, Mar 13 2007 08:28 AM
4 replies to this topic
#1
Posted 13 March 2007 - 08:28 AM
It is not the doing that is difficult, but the knowing
It's the illiquidity, stupid !
It's the illiquidity, stupid !
#2
Posted 13 March 2007 - 08:43 AM
John is one of the top performers...
One thing I want to say is that in any nasty decline we normally get some Bearish readings from the sentiment fairly early, and we either bounce or not, but then we really head down and get folks REALLY scared and claiming that sentiment doesn't work.
I will also say that the speed with which the Bearishness rose implies that this is only a correction. Take it for what it's worth.
Mark
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#3
Posted 13 March 2007 - 09:39 AM
I have a fund that's in the "M100" right now. I've managed it since Jul of 2000. I can say that I'm only about 65-70% invested in my fund with the entire remainder in SDS and MZZ as I'm looking for a second wave down which may or may not come. I am now mostly invested in energy and materials again as I'm expecting another spring bottom.....FWIW.
There is plenty of bullishness though as the cash levels are very low.
#5
Posted 13 March 2007 - 10:34 AM
Couple of other things: that Marketocracy crowd seems to be mostly fundamentally-oriented. Sometimes they're top stock picks are good fades.
RE: being a guru. I tried it for awhile and didn't like it. Now I'm just a trader.