Michael Lewitt | TalkMarkets | Page 2
Hedge Fund Manager/Author
Contributor's Links: Money Morning
Michael E. Lewitt has managed billions for institutional and high-net-worth clients and created several of the worlds top-ranked credit and hedge funds over a 29-year career. He is widely regarded as the No. 1 credit strategist working today. Michael graduated from Brown University and was a PhD ...more

Articles

Latest Posts
17 to 32 of 71 Posts
The Trump Administration Won’t Help These Companies At All
Yellen’s higher rates, plus Trump’s proposed tax cuts, are positioned to deal a serious blow to the high yield sector. Here’s why.
Here’s How To Profit Off The Real Brains Of The Market
Stocks paused from their post-election rally last week as the Dow Jones Industrial Average gained a paltry 18.28 points or 0.1% to end the week at 19170.42.
This Restaurant Stock Will Either Make You Sick Or Make You Rich
Having spent years studying junk bond companies, I am always suspicious when I see a restaurant company trading at a high multiple of earnings, cash flow, or debt.
Trump Will Actually Be Good For Gold – Here’s Why
Gold sold-off sharply since the election based on the belief that President-elect Trump will bring higher growth. This sell-off makes little sense for those who understand that gold is an investment in monetary policy failure.
This Quietly Rising Blue Line Spells Disaster For The Credit Markets
Unlike equity markets, which are overvalued but not dangerously so, credit markets are in an epic bubble that threatens to inflict major pain on investors.
Your Patience Is About To Pay Off, As CZR Gets Some Sweet Revenge
I expect Caesars stock to rise sharply as the company’s value is shifted from creditors to equity holders. I am strongly reiterating my earlier recommendation: buy and hold Caesars Entertainment Corp. now.
DB Hits A Record Low (And Our Puts Are Up 166% Today)
Deutsche Bank is the proverbial canary in the coal mine of the global financial system. It poses systemic risk because it is poorly managed, even more poorly capitalized, and party to $60 trillion of derivatives contracts.
The Fed Just Gave These Four Stocks A Reprieve (But Not For Long)
What a shock – the Fed didn’t raise interest rates on Wednesday. Their next chance is in December – we’ll see if they chicken out then, too.
Save Yourselves Before The Fed's Next Big Failure
Volatility finally visited the stock market last week after the dullest summer in two decades as the hydra-headed Federal Reserve played Hamlet regarding its intentions regarding interest rates.
The Most Disturbing Thing Central Banks Are Doing Right Now
The worst thing the Fed could do is keep interest rates low; instead, it should announce that it will start raising rates by 25 basis points each quarter until the Fed Funds rate reaches 2%.
How A Single Word From The Fed Can Wipe Out Markets
The Dow Jones Industrial Average fell nearly 400 points or 2.1% on Friday while the S&P 500 dropped nearly 54 points or 2.5% and the Nasdaq Composite Index also shed 2.5% and nearly 134 points.
This Is The One Place Where We Actually Need More Taxes
I’m all for radical tax reform: getting rid of tax deductions, ending estate taxes, and most of all, drastically lowering income and corporate tax rates. But there’s one section of the economy where we need more taxes.
This U.S. Bank Is About To Relive The 2008 Derivatives Nightmare
Citigroup Inc. already nearly destroyed itself with derivatives during the 2008 crisis, requiring the biggest taxpayer bailout in history in order to stay afloat.
Central Banks Are Willfully Destroying This Critical Market Function
With central banks owning $25 trillion of financial assets and sovereign wealth funds owning countless trillions more, it is time to ask whether capitalism as we know it is a thing of the past.
Here’s Why High Yield Bonds Are Much Riskier Than Most Investors Realize
High yield bonds are properly understood as hybrid securities that possess the characteristics of both debt and equity. Yet most investors in this asset class focus on the "spread" at which a bond trades.
This Looks Like The Set-Up For A Bond Bloodbath
The move of more than $12 trillion of global debt into negative-yielding territory is directly at odds with the argument that the global economy is healthy.
17 to 32 of 71 Posts