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Aaron Wormus is the managing director of HedgeCo Networks, and part-time financial and technology blogger for Wormus.com.
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Alex Akesson is the author of Hedgefunds-Weblog.com, providing breaking news and interviews for the hedge fund industry.
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Peter J. de Marigny is Portfolio Manager of DITMo® Strategies, an Equity Hedge, Aggressive-Income Objective, Buy/Write Portfolio for an Aggressive-Income Objective used as an Enhanced Cash investment vehicle. Pj is also Head of Risk Alternative Strategies for Newport Beach, CA advisor Renovatio Asset Management. » View Peter J. de Marigny
Ryan Conner is Principal at HedgeCo Securities. As an experienced industry veteran, Ryan Conner offers his opinions on the hedge fund industry and hedge fund strategies.
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Rashida Fleet is involved with consulting and working with managers during the fund launch phase. Her work includes; interviewing managers, collecting information for the HedgeCo database and contributing to the HedgeCo News feed.
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Tim Seymour is co-founder and managing partner of Red Star Asset Management, as well as Chief Operating Officer of the $116 million Red Star Double Alpha Fund.
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Richard Heller Richard Heller is a partner at the New York City law firm of Thompson Hine LLP. His experience is in the formation of private offerings for hedge funds as well as the formation of registered broker-dealers and RIAs.
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Bret Rosenthal Principal of RCM, LLC, and founding partner of the Fortune's Favor Family of Funds.
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Cameron Hight, CFA, is an investment industry veteran with experience from both buy and sell-side firms, including CIBC, DLJ, Lehman Brothers and Afton Capital. He is currently the Founder and President of Alpha Theory™, a Portfolio Management Platform designed to give fundamental money managers the ability to create their own repeatable discipline to organize the complex process of portfolio management.
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Big banks with government support VS. Smaller banks operating in the real world

“Better than expected” EPS (the big banks)
Wells Fargo (WFC)
Goldman Sachs (GS)
J P Morgan (JPM)
Bank of America (BAC)

Worse than expect EPS (the smaller banks)
Keycorp (KEY)
Pacwest Bancorp (PACW)
SVB Financial (SIVB)
US Bancorp (USB)
Zion Bancorp (ZION)
State Street (STT)
Bank of New York Mellon (BK)
Comerica (CMA)
Huntington Bancshares (HBAN)
Northern Trust (NTRS)
ETC. (Too many to list, but you get the idea)

So the jury is back and the results were as expected for those of you who follow this blog. Over the previous few blogs the banking analyst at Rosenthal Capital Management (that would be yours truly) presented a case for a rather egregious dichotomy developing in the banking space at the behest of our government. In a desperate attempt to reverse investor sentiment and create an environment for banks to raise capital, the government changed rules and gave support to the biggest banks. The last 5 weeks have been rife with “positive” announcements from the big banks that led to a spirited stock market rally. Companies like GS have jumped at the opportunity to raise capital. GS issued new stock at $123 / share, raised $5 billion and the stock has not traded above $123 since even though we were told the deal was dramatically oversubscribed (the stock trades between $113-$115 as I write this).

Week 6 of the stock market rally is underway and reality can no longer be avoided or covered up. The smaller regional banks are announcing earnings and without the help of government the numbers can only be described as macabre.

Important Rule: The reaction to the news is more important than the news.

The direction of the market in the coming weeks can certainly be debated. Yes, we were right on the news, but often it takes time for the herd to respond to reality. Cracks in the foundation of this market rally have formed. Momentum is waning as the market moves higher and volume signals are flashing yellow. However, a market responding to government manipulation can be hard to predict short term so caution is the word of the day.

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