Brady Willett's Blog

Senior Editor
bwillett [at] fallstreet [dot] com ()

A successful private investor for more than 15 years, Brady Willett graduated from Saint Mary�s University in 1995. After being startled by what he saw as dangerously high valuation levels and an uncritical mob mentality casting its shadow across the global equity markets, he began FallStreet.com in January of 2000. Mr. Willett is co-author of the book Lessons UnLearned, Co-Producer of the Wall Street Wish List, and Senior editor of FallStreet.com.

FallStreet was launched in January of 2000 with the mandate of providing an alternative opinion on the U.S. equity markets. In the context of the uncritical herd euphoria that characterizes the mainstream media, Fallstreet.com strives to provide investors with the information they needed to make informed investment decisions. To that end, we provide a clearinghouse for Bearish information, independent research on specific company and industries, and an investment newsletter containing market insights and company selections.

Tales From the Cryptomania – Part I

By Brady Willett – Hoping to strike it rich, “junior miners” like to dig holes in the ground after they secure funding. When times are good money is easily attracted and many holes are dug, and when times are bad some juniors are forced to close up shop.

Have Stocks Reached a Permanently Rigged Plateau?

By Brady Willett – A painting recently sold for a record $450 million, a blanket recently sold for $1.5 million, Bitcoin has gone ballistic, and Cramer thinks there are ‘bubbles’ everywhere except stocks. Are these the types of signals that bears have been waiting for? In a word, maybe.

Where Did All the Bears Go?

By Brady Willett – The Fed started hacking interest rates in 2007 and QE3 ended in October 2014. This 7-year period of extraordinary ease and the nearly 3-year upswing since has been a difficult time for many market contrarians and...

Bond Bear Bubbleheads

By Brady Willet – Conventional wisdom holds that with central banks’ beginning to throw their experimental policies into reverse the strings holding the asset price boom together are slowly being cut. No disagreement here. But while the divergence between...

The Central Bank Lullaby

Why is a song about a severely injured baby and smashed cradle sung to children at night to lull them to sleep? Apparently, because If you sing this popular lullaby often enough the nonsensical violence in the storyline fades and the rhythmically appealing sounds endure.

The Man

Thanks to a series of colossal failures that were impossible to hide, we now know that Futures Commission Merchants (FCMs) could instantly access billions of dollars that did not belong to them.

2013: Rebuild Me a Crisis, One Dollar At a Time

For the first time since 2007 the book value of the largest U.S. home builders is set to post an annual increase. This suggests that after a lost decade*, the worst is finally over.

Bernanke Ponders The Plunge

Three months ago Ben Bernanke gave a series of lectures and defended the Fed’s actions during the financial crisis. In what was tantamount to a post-crisis victory lap, Bernanke contended that “we did stop the meltdown”, and “we avoided what would have been, I think, a collapse of the global financial system.”

Does JP Morgan Have Staying Power?

News that JP Morgan lost $2 billion trading synthetic credit securities is spreading like wild fire. Shares of JPM are deeply in the red. The stench of Volcker is in the air.

Equities Are Not Dead

Proclamations like ‘The Death of Equities’ usually arrive near the point of maximum pessimism, and when everyone is most bearish it is usually time to take a contrarian stance and buy. However, today - less than 4-years into a historic deleveraging phase* - calls that equities are dead are likely to prove premature. Equities are not ‘dead’ in the sense that they are poised to rally strongly from a contrarian perspective. Rather, equities are simply dying…

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