Tuesday, June 30, 2009

Weekly Update 6/26/09

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The S&P 500 Index fell again for the second week in a row, down -0.20%.



This small fall could be just a small break in the rally or a foreshadow of a start os summer sell-off, still too close to call. We continue to get mixed positive and negative economic news almost on a daily basis. There does however seem to be some positive results from our government's effort to stablize things.



On a good note, the was a increase of 2.4% in exisiting home sales as reported by the National Association of Realtors. There is now only a 9 1/2 month supply of unsold existing homes vice the 11.3 month supply from November of last year.



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Monday, June 22, 2009

Second Principle of Stock Market Investing

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Plan your stock market analysis attack with a
three step process:  G.Q.V



  1. Growth Potential

  2. Quality Company

  3. Value Priced


Growth Potential


This is the place to start when beginning your research for a company or
product to invest in.  Normally the basis for growth is the potential
for an increase in sales and revenue.  Companies that do well in these
two areas and usually rewarded with higher share prices.  Sometimes a
solid history of growth could mean that a company is headed in the right
direction.  You can obtain reports about a public company's earnings
every quarter and a proposed EPS, or earnings per share.  Another great
place for your research is the web at several different sites:
MSN Money,
Sharebuilder,
Yahoo Finance.


Quality Company


A quality company is one that is built on strong principles and has a
strong drive to become profitable.  How a company does against its
competitors will show you well that company is performing and will perform. 
If the company sells a product, how well is that product branded and what
market share does it control.  Another good way to evaluate that
company is to see if it has generated a strong return for its shareholders
in the past.  Look for the leaders of the pack.


Value Priced


The starting point on this part is to look at a company's P/E or
price/earning ratio.  The is defined as a comparison of the stock price
to its earnings.  Basically it is how much you are paying for a dollar
of a company's earnings.  You can take a historical look at past P/E
ratios to determine what the current stock value is based in today's
dollars.  You could also compare the P/E ratio of competitor stocks to
see where the one you are looking at stacks up.  A good practice is to
look at the earnings per share growth rate to the P/E ratio.  If the
P/E ratio is under or near the EPS growth rate, it could possibly signal a
good value to buy. 





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Thursday, June 18, 2009

Weekly Update 6/17/09

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It looks like the over all market is actually up 0.7% as of last weeks end. The largest news is that oil prices are up to levels from last October 2008. Oil prices are up to around $72 a barrel with a possible rise in oil demand.

Not much new news this week as well. Exports declined quicker than imports with a trade deficit increase by 2.2%. Good news is that retail sales rose for the first time in three months last May. Jobless claims were at the lowest levels in Jan 09, but continue to climb currently to just under 7 million.

First quarter earnings for the S&P Index companies fell almost 40% from 2008 Q1. Companies’ new challenges are to regain profitability. The Labor Department reported that there was an increase of 1.6% of non-farm business productivity. However, most of this increase can be due to the reduction of companies’ work forces.
So far March 9th looks like to be very near the bottom of the bear market and some may consider profit taking at the market has climbed back up to present levels.

Overall debt is still a major driving force behind the current crisis and we need to maintain caution. GDP may still be lower than the past few years. Asset diversification and proper allocation still remains to be the key investing strategy in weathering this stock market.

- written by Bob Feazall

Thursday, June 11, 2009

First Principle of Stock Market Investing

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The first principle of stock market investing is that it is definitely not like a casino. The market does not act like a place where people who are "lucky” get huge rewards for little or no effort. In a casino, you can make “some” calculated plays, but everyone knows that after a length of time, the HOUSE wins. This is not true with the stock market. In the stock market, people can use all type of research, news, and current economy conditions to make well informed and sound investment decisions.

Try and think of stock market investing like planting a flower or a tree. You take all sorts of steps to pick the right seed/sapling, one that you will be proud to see grow. The type of plant is important, does it need sunlight, lots of water, shade, or a certain soil type. You must choose carefully where your want your plant to grow. You feel assured that if you have made solid preparations, that you will be rewarded with something beautiful to look at. The same thing goes for building, ie growing a large and beautiful stock portfolio.

Stock market investors plan their portfolios in this manner. They have learned that over the years, consistency is the key ingredient to being successful. Contributing from your savings on a usual schedule and continuing to invest in up or down markets will prove triumphant.

Now, investing on these proven concepts does not seem as exhilarating as winning it big at the casino with no effort, but you will be far better off with much lower overall risk and a larger reward.

Take a look at the other principles on this website to learn (plan your planting) about where to invest your hard earned dollar.

Friday, June 5, 2009

Risk and Diversification

Totally Free Market Analysis


In a nutshell, there are two types of risk when investing in a stock:


#1 - Company risk - or Unsystematic risk


Company or industry specific risk that is inherent in each investment. The amount of unsystematic risk can be reduced through appropriate diversification. Also known as "specific risk", "diversifiable risk" or "residual risk". For example, news that is specific to a small number of stocks, such as a sudden strike by the employees of a company you have shares in, is considered to be unsystematic risk.



#2 - Market risk - or Systematic risk


The risk inherent to the entire market or entire market segment. Also known as "un-diversifiable risk" or "market risk." Interest rates, recession and wars all represent sources of systematic risk because they affect the entire market and cannot be avoided through diversification. Whereas this type of risk affects a broad range of securities, unsystematic risk affects a very specific group of securities or an individual security. Systematic risk can be mitigated only by being hedged. Even a portfolio of well-diversified assets cannot escape all risk.



So, the easiest way to get rid of risk is through portfolio diversification. Proper diversification will essentially nullify the individual company risk of each stock that you own.


Q: Uh, I own Google, Apple, Microsoft and RIMM. Am I diversified. Google is an internet play, Apple makes tech products, Microsoft is a software play and RIMM makes cell phones.


A: You're not quite there. Diversification should be thought of as investing in different industries that have as little effect on each other as possible:
Ex. Tech, Industrial manufacturing, consumer staples, health care/pharmaceutical, energy


Q: I own three stocks, am I diversified in three different industries.


A: No. Research shows that at least 5-10 stocks should be chosen to get a diversified portfolio. Some research states that company risk doesn't really go away until you own 30-40 different securities. More on that in a second.


Q: Should I sink all of my money in at once, or should I space out my buying?


A: In my opinion, this one depends. There is something called dollar cost averaging. The novice investor should invest constantly adding a little to the pot each month. Over the long term, this constant investment provides purchases at various prices which should all appreciate at 8-12% on average. The serious, experienced investor may want to make large plays when market conditions warrant it. If that is what you plan on doing, always have some cash set aside for the next big purchase.


Q: Which mutual funds should I choose?


A: Depends. Mutual funds are great in that the diversification is built in. However, there isn't a single mutual fund I know of that invests in the world. It's just too broad. In fact, there is some research out there that suggests you can be overly diversified, especially in mutual funds and that can hurt returns as well.


You have to look at a couple of factors: Age/ Investment time Horizon (how many years to retirement), Risk tolerance, job safety, other investments, income level, etc.

If you're young 20-30s, you should have a more aggressive portfolio and invest in riskier things.

In you're 40s, you should start to move into safer plays, like some bonds, but a healthy dose of equity stocks

50s - after you buy your viagra, you should continue to shift more into safer investments with a good spread of mutual funds, dividend returning stocks and bonds.

60s - most of your investments should be safeguarded in fixed income/bonds with a little exposure to equity still.

All this assumes retirement at age 65.

Small cap funds - invest in smaller companies with higher risk. Very volatile. Higher returns on avg with about 14.5% over the long term. Large swings up and down in values. Better for investors with longer time horizons for investment.


Mid cap funds - medium sized companies, but still fairly risky. Med to high volatility. Returns avg 12% or so


Large cap funds - your mega companies. Dividend players. Lower growth is traded for dependable returns and dividends. 8-10% return on avg.


International funds - You should see what countries are the funds concentrated in and ensure the funds isn't overly weighted in emerging nations. These were hot mutual funds the last few years with BRIC countries (Brazil, Russia, India and China) all skyrocketing. Right now, Asian markets are sucking except for Japan which has shown to be surprisingly resilient and still increasing. International index funds return 8-12% on avg over the long term.


Index funds: S&P 500 funds, Wilshire, etc. Also find long term plays. Realize that S&P is weighted towards largest companies and Wilshire is targeted towards smaller companies.


There are many more mutual funds out there which are more narrowly focused. ETFs (exchange traded funds) are also nice because they trade like stocks in which you can buy and sell them almost immediately.


So, bottom line, and without delving into Betas and Weighted average cost of capital and other formulas, you need to diversify in order to protect yourself from being overinvested too heavily in one area. My personal opinion is this:


If you don't plan to spend several hours a week following your stock investments and reading Quarterly earnings reports, Annual reports, studying ratios, and paying attention to the various news sources, than you should stay away from stocks and invest in mutual funds. If you do as I do and spend at least an hour a day reviewing information on various opportunities, then stock picking may be your ticket to improving returns.


I recommend the following books for those getting serious on investing: Rich Dad Poor Dad by Kiyosaki, Peter Lynch's Beating the Street, Jim Cramer's Real Money: Sane Investing in an Insane World, and Warren Buffets book. Each investor has a different investment strategy that you can learn from even if you don't like their investment styles.


If you're lazy, don't care to learn about your investments, pay a professional to invest your money or pick some index mutual funds and invest in 4-6 different funds including: International index funds, domestic index funds, small, mid and large cap funds and other different value, growth or blended funds. Value funds look to invest in undervalued funds, growth funds look to invest in fast growing companies, and blended funds mix in both types of strategies. For example, you can invest in Large cap growth (which is hard to find by the way) or Large cap (value), or midcap growth or blend or value funds, etc.


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