The Flinchum File

Thoughtful Economic Analysis and Existential Opinions
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Welcome to The Flinchum File

I am an Accredited Investment Fiduciary at Bay Capital Advisors, an investment firm headquartered in Virginia Beach, VA. After retiring from Truist Bank, I started this firm to work more closely with a smaller number of clients, and it has been great! Our client load is about 25% of the national average.

Writing is not for the shy or the meek. It exposes a person’s mind and character. I hope you enjoy the view.

The opinions expressed in The Flinchum File are those of the writer, Jim Flinchum, and do not necessarily reflect those of Bay Capital Advisors, LLC

Wasting a Perfectly Good Sunrise

This morning, I enjoyed my coffee sitting on our patio, overlooking the dewy 18th green at the famed Firestone Country Club in Akron, Ohio.  But, as I watched a Momma-goose and her five little gooslings waddle across the manicured green, I was thinking about the highest marginal tax rate on Federal income taxes. There has been much recent discussion that it is time to raise…

The Over-Hyped Monthly Jobs Report

Like drinking from a fire hydrant, investors have trouble consuming economic data.  There is just so much of it. If economists are good for nothing else, they do produce a flood of data.  While there is honest disagreement about which economic report is the most important, it is clear that the investment markets are most quickly affected by the monthly Jobs Report from the Bureau…

Have You No Decency . . . Google?

The U.S. Senate held the infamous Army-McCarthy hearings in 1954 for the purpose of finding any communists in the government.  During that process, Senator McCarthy trashed the reputation of many good and decent people.  Finally, one of the lawyers, Joe Welch, could no longer tolerate the abuse and confronted the Senator with “Have you no sense of decency?” That’s the way I think about Google!…

Ayn Rand Overdose

Readers know I have long been fascinated by the writings and philosophy of Ayn Rand.  They may remember my blog entry on December 5th of last year called “The Little Russian Girl Who Changed America.” This weekend, I have overdosed on her!  First, I watched a DVD entitled “Ayn Rand:  The Prophecy of Atlas Shrugged,” which was her landmark book published in 1957. This DVD, however,…

Mother’s Milk

Investment analysts from the Warren Buffet school of investing often say that corporate earnings are “the Mother’s Milk of stock markets.”  If true, the babies must be getting fat and healthy. In the 2008 crash, corporate earnings for the S&P 500 dropped a staggering 92%.  But, take a look at this chart: Corporate earnings have rebounded just as sharply as they fell.  In a mere…

Growth Blues

During the fourth quarter of last year, our economy expanded at a 3% rate, and there was a collective sigh of relief.  We knew there was a slowdown during the first quarter.  A survey of economists expected the GDP growth rate for the first quarter would be only 2.5%, which is not great but certainly acceptable.  Unfortunately, it only increased 2.2%. It would have been…

The Smell in Nursing Homes . . . Trouble

You heard it here first — something stinks in the long-term-care insurance industry! Long-term-care insurance provides funds for some of the expenses related to nursing home care and other end-of-life expenses.  Insurance companies saw the massive baby-boomer generation headed into their golden years and smelled an opportunity to sell insurance. A brilliant marketing move by them to sell insurance was to argue convincingly that financial…

Parsing the French Election

Unfortunately, Sarkozy came in second in Sunday’s nationwide election.  This means he will face a run-off election with Socialist candidate Francois Hollande in two weeks. Sarkozy has been instrumental in the effort to impose fiscal discipline on Europe.  Unfortunately, he was also caught in the undertow of the European crisis.  Despite being a conservative, the debt-to-GDP ratio for France has risen from 67% to 90%…

Time for Lift-Off ??

There has been a good deal of discussion about the slowness or the weakness of this recovery.  My analysis is that recoveries from financial collapse take longer than a normal garden-variety recession, because it takes so long to de-leverage or reduce debt levels.  But, here is another take on the slowness of this recovery. If we define a “massive bear market” as one where an…

“Sell in May and Go Away”

That is an old adage from the Wall Street days before air-conditioning, when New York was insufferably hot during the summer, and the Robber Barons who controlled the trading spent the summer on the shore. Indeed, for the last two years and three of the last four years, the market reached its high in May and then drifted down the rest of the year.  Just…

A Good Life Deserves a Good Death

A few nights ago, we watched the new movie Iron Lady about Margaret Thatcher.  I expected an inspiring story about the rise of a grocer’s daughter to become the first female prime minister of England.  Instead, it was a touching study of dementia, i.e., that slow descent into madness before death.  Hearing others talk about things she didn’t understand, her fears rose.  Seeing others talk among…

Column Time

For those few folks who do not subscribe to Inside Business, my latest quarterly column can be found here: http://insidebiz.com/news/great-first-quarter-lousy-recovery  I don’t know why the online version never looks as good as the print version, but that is just another reason to subscribe.

Friday Night at the Flinchums

Sometime ago, I bought a DVD on the PBS website called “The Crash of 1929” and watched it last night.  (I really do have to get a life!  That’s no way to spend a Friday night, according to my wife.) Despite the ever-present fear that “it could happen again,” there are at least three differences that make a repeat of the 1929 crash very unlikely.…

The Wisdom of the Market ?

Last night, I toyed with writing a blog that said the market would open today — up or down — depending on four things that would occur before the opening.  On Thursday night, Google would announce its earnings and China would announce its GDP growth rate for the first quarter.  This morning, both JP Morgan and Wells Fargo would also announce their earnings. All three…

Here We Go Again . . . ??

For the third year in a row, the rites of Spring include a European panic attack.  Today, it became clear that Spain is going down the same trail as Greece.  While their interest rates have not reached earlier highs, the spread between their rates and the rates of Germany have reached a record high.  The message is that investors   prefer the relative safety of…

Borrowing Jobs

Congress is very good at one thing, i.e., borrowing from the future.  Apparently, so does the weather! The Department of Labor released their monthly Jobs Report this morning, and it was disappointing.  Most expectations were that the economy created about 200 thousand jobs in March, down from about 240 thousand in February.  Instead, only 120 thousand jobs were created, the smallest gains in five months.…

Irrational Markets or Irrational Investors?

The conventional wisdom among economists is that capitalism is rational, because people act in their own best interest.  However, among investors, there is an old adage that the stock market can be irrational and stay irrational longer than you can stay solvent.  The market was irrational yesterday and today. In the short run, the stock market is a contest between expectations and results.  The expectation…

Gallows Humor

For those readers old enough to remember privacy, you might just need something to smile about, and I’d recommend you click on or copy/paste this link: http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052702303816504577309562257097438.html?KEYWORDS=eric+hague     It is a humorous column written by Eric Hague about Google’s relentless pursuit of every piece of personal information about you. By the way, I no longer search the internet with Google and highly recommend you…

The 1% of the 1% of the . . .

The most enduring contribution of the almost memorable Occupy Wall Street movement to the American lexicon is . . . the notion of the 1% vs. the 99%.  You know —  that is the notion that 99% of Americans suffer because the 1% has all the wealth and repress the poor 99%. Now, suppose you have worked hard, as well as been lucky, and you are…

Global Bi-Partisanship Needed

Republicans often argue that less regulation is always better.  Democrats are often seen arguing that more regulation is always better.  Sometimes, they are both right! For years, during the Bush II administration, financial deregulation was a sacred objective.  Not surprisingly, the economy boomed, and the financial sector eventually became 22% of GDP.  Also, not surprisingly, a little deregulation soon became too much, financial deregulation became…

What . . . We Agree ???

One of my favorite conferences each year is the annual Policy Conference of the National Association of Business Economics, which starts today in Washington.  This is the first time in many years I have missed it and already regret missing it. One of the opening events is the release of the latest member survey.  What strikes me as unusual with this new survey is the…

It’s Only Been 46 Years

I bought my first share of stock in 1966.  Since then, there has never been one day that somebody wasn’t predicting the sky is falling.  Of course, the sky does fall sometimes, like in 1929 and maybe in 2008.  But, it doesn’t fall everyday.  Just because the S&P 500 fell half of 1% last week — doesn’t mean the sky is falling. Last week might…

Heads, I Win . . . Tails, the Shareholders Lose

Many analysts have concluded the global financial crisis resulted from bond salesmen who were simply working their incentive plan by selling mortgage-backed-bonds secured with subprime mortgages, which created large losses around the world.  How many have you seen doing the “perp-walk” when arrested?  The answer is NONE.  They made millions.  When things went bad, they walked away as winners. Readers know I have long argued…

“Once-In-A-Generation” . . . “”

The legendary and powerful Wall Street firm of Goldman Sachs made an interesting investment call this morning. Yes, this is the same firm that was slimed by a former employee in The New York Times last week, setting off a firestorm of suspicion and hostility toward the firm.  He alleged the firm was, to be kind, ethically-challenged, referring to its clients as “muppets” to be fooled…

Two-Speed Housing Market

A good friend of mine faithfully forwards each issue of The Kiplinger Lettter which I have studied for many decades now.  I like this newsletter because it is clear, concise, and non-partisan. The current issue is unusually interesting.  Even though the average price of homes is expected to drop another 2% nationally this year, home prices have already been on the rise for a year in…

Getting Past Losing

One of our basic values is that the lazy should not be rewarded with the earnings of people who work. However, we have a poor, elderly relative, who is married to a husband who will not work.  When her health finally failed a year or so ago and could no longer work, we thought her husband would finally be forced to get a job.  We…

Wall Street’s Dirty Little Secret

On Wednesday, a disgruntled employee wrote an open letter of resignation to the legendary Goldman Sachs which appeared on the Op-Ed page in the New York Times.  Since then, Wall Street has been obsessed with it. Goldman Sachs has a long, storied history as an investment firm on Wall Street.  They were always considered “the smartest guys in the room.”  They were feared by other…

Your Weekend Errand

From the late 1970’s to the mid 1990’s, home prices moved within a fairly narrow range.  Then, they spiked up dangerously.  Today, as indicated by this graph, home prices have returned to the bottom of that range. With interest rates starting to tick up, that should send potential home buyers back into the market, making this the bottom of the market.  I know there are…

A Guilty Victim

Last Friday, the Department of Labor released the all-important monthly Jobs Report.  Generally, it was better-than-expected, with 227 thousand jobs being created.  (This morning, High Frequency Economic,whom I respect, predicted over 300 thousands being created monthly by late Spring?)  Our U.S. unemployment rate did not drop, remaining at 8.3% of the workforce, because so many previously-discouraged people had re-joined the workforce to look for a…

Bay Capital Advisors Receives Top 10 Wealth Management Companies Award

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