Vitaliy Katsenelson's Blog

Chief Investment Officer

Vitaliy Katsenelson was born and raised in Murmansk, Russia (the home for Russia’s northern navy fleet, think Tom Clancy’s Red October). He immigrated to the US from Russia in 1991 with all his family.

Vitaliy is a Director of Research / Portfolio Manager at Investment Management Associates, Inc (IMA) a value investment firm based in Denver, Colorado. After receiving his graduate and undergraduate (cum laude) degrees in finance from University of Colorado at Denver, and finishing his CFA designation, he wanted to keep learning. Figuring the best way to learn is to teach, Vitaliy first taught an undergraduate class at the University of Colorado at Denver and later a graduate investment class at the same university that was designed based on his day job. He is currently on sabbatical from teaching for awhile.

Vitaliy has written articles for Financial Times, Barron’s, BusinessWeek, New York Post, Forbes.com, among others. He has been interviewed in Barrons, The Wall Street Transcript, Value Investor Insight, Welling@Weeden, BusinessWeek, BNN, CNBC, and countless radio shows. Vitaliy is also the author of Active Value Investing: Making Money in Range-Bound Markets an investment book published by John Wiley & Sons in October 2007, and interviewed by Jim Puplava February 2008.

How I Bought the Internet — and You Can Too

A few months ago my firm bought the Internet. Let me explain: When people think about the Internet, they imagine an enormous, decentralized (key word), spiderweblike network of millions of servers and hundreds of millions of...

Why Investors Hate Apple — and Are Dead Wrong

Apple’s growth has slowed, and in the minds of investors the company has gone from a growth stock to a value trap.

Ben Bernanke: Buy One Suit, Get Three Free

Jos. A. Bank has always been a very promotional retailer. It would jack up prices, then run sales for consumers happy to be deceived—a typical American retail tale. But sometime in 2008, Jos. A. Bank went promotional on steroids.

A New Secular Bull Market: Are We There Yet?

Sideways markets happen not because stock market gods play an unkind joke on gullible humans but because of human emotions. Historically, sideways markets have always followed secular bull markets.

Two Contradictory Thoughts About Elections

The election is over. I am left with two very contradictory feelings. First is the one of appreciation – every four years we peacefully replace our government.

Playing a Game of Economic Survivor

When I step back and look at the past 100 years, I’m reassured by all the things that the U.S. and global economies survived: pandemics that wiped out a percentage of the global population, two “hot” world wars and a cold war, the disintegration of a superpower, plenty of other wars, a few nuclear plant meltdowns, economic collapses, terrorist attacks on U.S. soil, stock market crashes, and I’m sure I’m forgetting a slew of other bad things. Somehow our economy (and economies that were affected a lot more than ours) got through those things. Our will to survive is so much stronger than any adversity.

Facebook IPO Was a Success and Wall Street Got What it Deserved

Being politically correct has never been my strongest quality; therefore I’ll say this: I don’t feel sorry for Facebook’s new shareholders. Despite NASDAQ technical glitches and analysts sharing changes in estimates for the near quarter only with big clients, the Facebook initial public offering (IPO) was a success.

Fed is Measuring U.S. Economic Health by the Wrong Number

Ironically, it is the Fed’s intervention in the free market and arbitrarily setting short- and long-term interest rates at insanely low levels that is responsible for this uncertainty, as it enables and propagates speculation, not investing (two distinctly different activities) and erodes confidence about the future.

We Are Not AAA

I have received many emails and a few calls from friends, asking one question: What are the consequences of the downgrade? So I decided to put my thoughts on paper. I break up the consequences into three categories: fundamental (the impact on the economy), emotional (the short-term impact on the market), and political (will it change anything in Washington DC?).

The Chinese Black Swan

Party rulers in China are trapped in a position that chess players deeply fear — zugzwang — where any move made puts you at disadvantage. In China, the potential cost of both action and inaction is economic collapse.

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