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Nothing wild here. Just Buffett (top left corner) and Bill Gates posing with Hooters after dining at the Hooters restaurant. Photo: Internet

 

ARE STOCKS oversold?

If you think some certainly are, and you are confident of their business fundamentals, this may be a wonderful buying opportunity.

The future is not always efficiently priced into stocks. 

Stock prices can swing wildly with investor sentiment.

Never a believer in efficient markets, Warren Buffett was quoted in an interview in the Apr 14 edition of FORTUNE magazine as saying: “Wild things happen in the markets. And the markets have not gotten more rational over the years. They've become more followed. But when people panic, when fear takes over, or when greed takes over, people react just as irrationally as they have in the past.”

Ever the sharp observer of markets, Buffett gave his highly refreshing and original take on a wide range of topics. Excerpts:

How does the current turmoil stack up against past crises?

Well, that's hard to say. Every one has so many variables in it. But there's no question that this time there's extreme leveraging and in some cases the extreme prices of residential housing or buyouts. You've got $20 trillion of residential real estate and you've got $11 trillion of mortgages, and a lot of that does not have a problem, but a lot of it does.

In 2006 you had $330 billion of cash taken out in mortgage refinancings in the United States. That's a hell of a lot - I mean, we talk about having $150 billion of stimulus now, but that was $330 billion of stimulus. And that's just from prime mortgages. That's not from subprime mortgages. So leveraging up was one hell of a stimulus for the economy.

If that was one hell of a stimulus, do you think the $150 billion government stimulus plan will make an impact?

Well, it's $150 billion more than we'd have otherwise. But it's not like we haven't had stimulus. And then the simultaneous, more or less, LBO boom, which was called private equity this time. The abuses keep coming back - and the terms got terrible and all that. You've got a banking system that's hung up with lots of that. You've got a mortgage industry that's deleveraging, and it's going to be painful.

The scenario you're describing suggests we're a long way from turning a corner.

I think so. I mean, it seems everybody says it'll be short and shallow, but it looks like it's just the opposite. You know, deleveraging by its nature takes a lot of time, a lot of pain. And the consequences kind of roll through in different ways. Now, I don't invest a dime based on macro forecasts, so I don't think people should sell stocks because of that. I also don't think they should buy stocks because of that.

Full FORTUNE article, here.

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No stuck-up CEO, Buffett performs before the Berkshire AGM of 2007. Photo: Internet


 

 

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