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ACCESS A PRINTABLE COPY OF THIS NEWSLETTER CLICK HERE.

Vol.3 Issue 5 May 1st, 2006
Send
comments and suggestions. or get more information at
info@NataliePace.com
Quote
of the Month:
Short
interest as a percentage of shares outstandingÉ can be helpful
in projecting the forward 12-month stock price performance of
various industry groups. Current short sales data support the
Information Technology, Telecom and Household & Personal products
groups but are worrisome with respect to the Consumer Services
[hotel, restaurant, leisure and educational services], Utilities
and Retailing areas.
U.S.
Equity Strategy, Tobias M. Levkovich Portfolio
Strategist
4.20.06.
|
- Are
Taxes Just a Waste of Time? How
265 billion dollars and 2.6 billion hours complying
with 66,000 pages of federal tax rules can be better
spent. By Dr. Gary Becker, Nobel Laureate, Economics.
- Affordable
Health Care. With Health
Savings Accounts, You Save an Arm and a Leg, Protect
Your A** and Build Your Nest Egg! By Dr. Gary Becker,
Nobel Laureate, Economics.
- Real
Estate (REITs) Rules Wall Street, but For How Long?
Market Update. By Paul Woods, President & CEO of Odyssey
Advisors, LLC.
- DreamWorks
Animation Rewrites the Fairy Tale, Putting Three Women
In Charge. Q&A with
Kris Leslie, DreamWorks Animation CFO. By Natalie Pace,
NataliePace.com, CEO and founder.
- My
Life as a Corporate Goddess.
By Jane C. Rosen.
- Great
Mother's Day Gift Idea :
Rose-Scented Sugar Scrub. By Natalie Pace, NataliePace.com
CEO and founder.
- From
Flipping Burgers to Owning Your Own Island.
By Natalie Pace, NataliePace.com CEO and founder. How tithing
10% to Your Nest Egg will make you a millionaire, even
if you're only bringing home $30,000.
- Swim
with Zillionaire Dolphins and Avoid Zero Sharks and
Tuna. By Chellie Campbell,
author of Zero to Zillionaire.
- R&R
= Energy.
Recharge the old fashioned way
- in a hammock. By Gary Kobat.
- Investing
is Not Surgery. Money is not cancer. Brokers are Not
Surgeons.
Why wise, informed, personal,
daily, healthy choices keep you fiscally fit. By Natalie
Pace, NataliePace.com CEO and founder.
- Can
Disney Bring the Magic Back?
By Anthony Diaz.
- An
Anatomy of Bear Markets.
By Marc Faber.
- NASDAQ
Doubles Up on the DOW.
By Natalie Pace, NataliePace.com CEO and founder.
|
|
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Are
Taxes Just a Waste of Time?
by Dr.
Gary Becker, Nobel Laureate, Economics, from his Becker-Posner
blog on April 16, 2006.
How
265 billion dollars and 2.6 billion hours complying with 66,000
pages of federal tax rules can be better spent.
Reprint
of the blog, "Tax Complexity and the Cost of Compliance."
As my wife
and I were recently preparing our income tax data to give to our
accountant, I began my annual guess about the cost of complying
in the U.S. with the Federal Tax code. But instead of just shaking
my head over it, as I usually do, I made a few simple calculations
that I will share with our readers. I will also offer some suggestions
on how to cut down drastically compliance costs and reduce the
negative effect of federal taxes on the efficiency of the economy.
We spent at
least 25 hours in 2005 preparing and keeping track of our 2005
income, deductible expenses, and other data relevant for tax purposes.
Our accountant spent another 6 or so hours, so together our tax
filing used over 30 hours. Last year the IRS processed about 130
million tax returns. If the average filer along with any professional
help together spent about 20 hours, 2.6 billion hours would have
gone into complying with the 2005 tax code. This may seem huge,
but the Tax Foundation put much more effort into their calculations,
and finds that about 6 billion hours were spent in complying with
the federal income tax code alone.
Businesses
spend many more hours than most individuals do, while many filers
who primarily have taxes withheld by their employers spent less
time because they use the "short" tax form. Still, over half of
all filers consulted accountants, lawyers, or other professionals
for assistance in preparing their taxes. During the tax season,
apparently over 1 million persons work professionally helping
others prepare their tax returns.
If we value
my 2.6 billion hours estimate conservatively at an average of
about $40 per hour because higher income filers and tax preparers
spend many more hours in tax preparation than lower income filers,
the aggregate cost of complying would be over $100 billion. This
is almost 10 per cent of the approximately $1.2 trillion that
will be paid in 2005 in federal income taxes. The Tax Foundation
concludes that total compliance costs for 2005 will amount to
$265 billion, or over 20 per cent of federal income tax revenue.
Even with
my lower estimate, compliance costs are big, despite the availability
of computer software that greatly helps in tax preparation. The
culprit is clearly the complicated tax code that has produced
over 66,000 pages of federal tax rules. Of course, these complications
are not there by accident, but are the result of pleadings and
lobbying (see our discussion last week of lobbying) by special
interests for favorable tax considerations. These include efforts
by builders and home owners to get the government to allow deductions
for interest paid on mortgages, by philanthropic organizations
and universities to have charitable contributions deductible from
reported income, by state and local governments to allow the deductibility
of state and local income and property taxes, by industries lobbying
to get accelerated depreciation on capital purchases, and special
tax provisions for the oil and gas industry. They also include
lobbying by financial institutions to get incomes accumulated
in IRA's to be tax free, by employers and other groups that prefer
the earned income tax credit over more generous welfare payments,
and so on for the many pages in the tax code.
 |
| Gary
Becker Nobel Laureate, Economic Sciences, 1992; Professor,
Economics and Sociology, University of Chicago; FasterCures
Board Member |
These numerous
provisions not only enormously raise the direct cost of tax compliance,
but cause many changes in behavior to take advantage of favorable
treatments in the tax code. These alterations in behavior, like
expenditures on compliance, usually make the economy less efficient,
whether because many talented lawyers and accountants spend their
time finding tax loopholes, or because too many and very large
houses are built to take advantage of the favorable tax treatment
of housing expenses, or because of many other changes in behavior.
Complications
in the tax code are an excellent example of the conflict that
sometimes arises between what is rational at the individual level,
and what is rational to society as a whole. Each interest group
lobbies to promote the interests of its members, although their
interests advance usually at the expense of the interests of others.
When many groups succeed in promoting their interests, losers
vastly outweigh winners since each group gains from what they
do, but loses from what is done to them by hundreds of other powerful
interest groups.
There is no
magic cure to this problem, at least none that I have encountered.
Still, it is valuable to see clearly the problems and how they
might be corrected because the future may provide opportunities
for reform that are not presently available. A window of opportunity
could arise to implement thoroughgoing changes that are not now
politically feasible. One example of this kind of process is the
voluntary army: a pipedream in the 1950's and 1960's became feasible
in the 1970's because of the discontent over the draft during
the Vietnam War.
The only way
to radically reduce compliance costs is to engage in drastic surgery
on the complexities of the tax code. The best approach would be
to essentially eliminate all deductions, and have tax rates based
just on total consumption, or as a second best alternative, just
based on total income. Then compliance costs would be small because
taxes owed could be calculated on a form the size of a postcard.
Such a radical
simplification is often confused with a flat tax, which is a tax
that is the same percent of income at all income levels. But eliminating
all special deductions and benefits does not imply a flat tax,
nor does a flat tax imply enormous tax simplification. In fact,
most people who propose a flat tax really are proposing a progressive
tax structure since they want incomes below a certain level to
be free of all income taxes, and then a constant tax rate on each
dollar of income about this minimum level. One could still have
low compliance costs with a greater degree of progression in rates
if tax rates started at zero and rose as incomes increased. Most
degrees of tax progression are consistent with low compliance
costs, although the more complicated the degree of tax progression,
the greater the alterations in behavior that reduce an economy's
efficiency.
To return
to the cost of tax compliance, it is obviously excessive and socially
wasteful. It is not easy to be optimistic about the prospects
for tax simplification since the fundamental trend over time in
the United States has been a steady increase in the complexity
of the tax code. But at some future time, concern over the social
waste in compliance costs that amounts to between 10 and 20 percent
of total revenue produced by the income tax may galvanize American
taxpayers into a revolt that, at least for a while, would result
in drastic simplifications of the tax code.
Dr.
Gary Becker
is a Professor at the University of Chicago Graduate School of
Business, Department of Economics and Sociology. Dr. Becker won
the Nobel Prize in Economics in 1992 for "extending the sphere
of economic analysis to new areas of human behavior and relations."
Why give
thousands of dollars to insurance companies for medical insurance,
when at least part of that could go to your nest egg? Why waste
billions of hours on preparing tax returns, when you could fill
out a return the size of a postcard? Find real solutions from
the doctor of the U.S. economy, Dr. Gary Becker, who will answer
your questions one-on-one in the NataliePace.com chat room on Wednesday,
May 17th at 8:45 a.m. PST (11:45 a.m. ET).
Yes, you
can maintain the security of medical insurance coverage, while
giving most of the money to your own nest egg. Yes, it is possible
to change governmental policy. Find out how. (Subscribers only.
Register Now!)
|
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Affordable
Health Care.
by Dr.
Gary Becker, Nobel Laureate, Economics, from his Becker-Posner
blog on February 5, 2006.
With
Health Savings Accounts, You Save an Arm and a Leg, Protect Your
A** and Build Your Nest Egg!
A reprint
of "Health
Care Reform"
Health Savings
Accounts (HSAs) were introduced in 2003 to help consumers pay
for non-catastrophic health care, and to give them financial incentives
to economize on unnecessary medical expenditures. The law allows
contributions to these accounts of up to $2700 for individuals
and $5450 for a family, as long as their contributions are not
greater than the deductible on their health insurance, which is
required to be at least $2100 before a person or family is eligible
to open such an account. The number of persons with high deductible
health insurance has increased rapidly to about three million
persons since HSAs were introduced, and some estimates indicate
that over one million persons have an HSA.
If a company
provides employees with an HSA, the company can deduct the amount
they contribute each year from its reported taxable income. Employees
do not have to report as taxable income either their employer
contributions or their own contributions. As a result, the number
of companies offering health savings accounts to their employees
has been growing rapidly, especially among larger companies. The
well-known companies that offer these accounts include Wal-Mart,
Microsoft, General Motors, and Daimler Chrysler.
Companies
are attracted by health savings accounts because of their ballooning
spending on the medical care of employees. During the flush times
in the past, companies like GM offered health insurance coverage
that often had minor or even no deductibles. They discovered much
to the damage to their balance sheets that employees can find
many frivolous ways to spend money on medical care when they do
not bear any of the cost. And since employees have become accustomed
to this "entitlement", it is hard to raise co-payments when negotiating
with unions. So many companies have started offering HSAs in the
few years since the present law took effect.
Individuals
who take out health savings accounts on their own are at a disadvantage
compared to employees since individuals have to contribute after-tax
dollars to their accounts. Other tax advantages are common to
both individual health savings accounts and those provided by
employers. The amount contributed in any year does not have to
be spent during that year on medical care, but can be carried
over to future years. This distinguishes HSAs from flexible-spending
accounts, where contributions in any year have to be spent in
the same year. The balance in a health saving account can be carried
over to later years without paying any taxes on it, or on the
interest earned on these balances. After age 65, dollars in these
accounts can be also spent on non-medical items without penalty,
but this spending is treated as income and is subject to income
taxes.
The President
proposed several highly desirable reforms in the system of health
savings accounts. Perhaps most important, individuals setting
up an HSA on their own would also be allowed to deduct their annual
contributions before reporting their income for tax purposes.
Since this eliminates one major advantage of employer-based HSAs
over accounts set up by individuals, it is an important step in
the right direction of leveling the playing field between individual
and employer-based health insurance.
This change,
if adopted by Congress, would reduce the number of persons without
any type of health insurance. For many of them have jobs at companies
that do not offer health plans, and they feel the premiums on
insurance that they can take out on their own are too high. The
proposed exclusion of contributions to an HSA from taxable income
would encourage some of these uncovered individuals to buy insurance
and set up an HSA. This would reduce a glaring hole in the American
approach to health care.
 |
| Gary
Becker Nobel Laureate, Economic Sciences, 1992; Professor,
Economics and Sociology, University of Chicago; FasterCures
Board Member |
President
Bush also proposed raising the ceiling on how much might be contributed
each year to a health saving account by tying the limit to the
annual deductible in a health insurance policy. This gives families
and individuals even greater incentives to economize on their
less essential medical expenditures. After all, the purpose of
insurance, health or otherwise, is to protect against very large
outlays, not against outlays that are more or less expected year
in and year out.
Of great importance,
Bush also proposed allowing companies to offer employees portable
health savings insurance that they could take with them if they
change jobs or retire. A major defect in the employer-based health
insurance that the United States has relied on since World War
II is that employees may lose their company-based private health
coverage when they become unemployed, when they retire, or when
they change jobs to one of many companies without health insurance
plans.
Studies show
that this lack of "portability" of health insurance coverage reduces
job turnover, and makes the American labor market less flexible
and efficient than it could be. Indeed, under the present system,
virtually the only way people can be reasonably assured of continued
health insurance coverage is by remaining throughout their working
career with stable employers that offer health insurance. This
"lock-in" effect is undesirable in a dynamic economy where good
jobs open up in growing industries, and opportunities in declining
industries dry up.
In contrast
to employees who continue coverage by remaining with the same
employer, individuals with their own health insurance plans sometimes
lose coverage after contracting a serious illness, or by making
too many claims. For various reasons, it is not possible for individuals
to buy long-term health insurance, although what they want is
protection against future major medical expenditures since it
is uncertain how healthy they will be when they get older.
Bush's proposal
to allow employers to offer portable HSAs is an important step
toward providing such longer-term coverage for the many men and
women who do not continue to work for the same employer, or who
want to maintain their health insurance plans after retirement.
If the ceiling on how much can be placed in these plans is raised
to high enough levels, HSAs could cover all but the medical claims
induced by major illnesses. Under present rules, individuals can
have a health saving account only if that is combined with a catastrophic
health insurance policy.
The President
also proposed offering up to $3000 in annual tax credits to help
low -income families buy health insurance if they also set up
a health savings account. Since tax savings are much less important
for lower income families, tax credits seems to be the appropriate
way to give poorer families greater incentives to economize on
their medical spending. It could also reduce the number on Medicaid
since lower income families might prefer to get the tax credit
and buy their own health insurance combined with a health savings
account.
President
Bush has proposed changes in the health care system that initially
will reduce tax collections and increase federal spending at a
time when the US government is already spending too much and running
a sizeable budget deficit. However, by making the health delivery
system more efficient, this important set of proposals in the
State of the Union address might end up raising tax collections,
and certainly would improve the efficiency of the American economy.
Dr.
Gary Becker
is a Professor at the University of Chicago Graduate School of
Business, Department of Economics and Sociology. Dr. Becker won
the Nobel Prize in Economics in 1992 for "extending the sphere
of economic analysis to new areas of human behavior and relations."
Why give
thousands of dollars to insurance companies for medical insurance,
when at least part of that could go to your nest egg? Did you
know that Òindividuals with their own health insurance plans sometimes
lose coverage after contracting a serious illness, or by making
too many claims,Ó according to Dr. Becker. Do you want to be someone
who gives $6000 or more a year, only to find out that when you
really need the coverage, it has been denied? With Health Savings
Accounts, You Save an Arm and a Leg, Protect Your A** and Build
Your Nest Egg! Find out how from the doctor of the U.S. economy,
Dr. Gary Becker, who will answer your questions one-on-one in
the NataliePace.com chat room on Wednesday, May 17th at 8:45 a.m. PST
(11:45 a.m. ET).
Whether
you are the Human Resources person at your corporation, self-employed,
under-insured, paying through the nose for medical insurance or
just looking for another way to get rich, this chat could provide
the information you need to retire rich and early. (Subscribers
only. Register Now!)
|
|
Real
Estate (REITs) Rules Wall Street, but For How Long?
by Paul
Woods, President & CEO of Odyssey Advisors, LLC.
Market
Update.
 |
| Paul
Woods, President & CEO Odyssey Advisors |
REITs have
outperformed the averages for the last 6 years and are starting
to resemble the Ever-Ready Bunny, but the real estate boom is
starting to show its age and its fair to wonder how much longer
these can keep going. Paul Woods
Well, THAT
was a nice change. The first quarter was pretty boring, with no
natural disasters, no spikes in energy prices, and no terrorist
activity in the sane parts of the world. At the Federal Reserve,
the new guy bears a remarkable resemblance to the old guy so far,
and interest rates went up again. Meanwhile, the first quarter
of 2006 was generally more of the same, with trends already established
in the economy and financial markets mostly remaining in place.
What's different
is that rising interest rates strengthened the dollar, and it
finally rose above year-ago levels. If this continues, a stronger
dollar should make comparisons more difficult for international
companies and reduce returns a bit on international investments.
There also appears to be some divergence among economists and
analysts. Economists expect the economy to rebound in the first
quarter of 2006 after slowing in the fourth quarter while analysts
have revised estimates for the S&P 500 downward in February
and March, after increasing earnings estimates steadily in the
second half of last year.

So far in
2006, Real estate investment trusts (REITs) are the top performing
equity market segment. REITs have outperformed the averages for
the last 6 years and are starting to resemble the Ever-Ready Bunny,
but the real estate boom is starting to show its age and its fair
to wonder how much longer these can keep going. In addition, the
numbers so far also favor small stocks and value while large growth
stocks are again the poorest performing segment.
Among industry
segments, alternative energy may be in the process of being discovered
as these stocks ran away and hid from the rest of the field in
the first quarter. In general, however, industrial and resource
stocks are continuing to outperform consumer and financial stocks.
For reference, here's the market index and industry group scorecard
for 2005 that measures price change only and does not include
dividends:
|
|
Symbol
|
12/30/05
|
03/31/06
|
% Change
|
|
Dow Industrials
|
.DJIA
|
10,717.50
|
11,109.32
|
3.66%
|
|
Nasdaq Composite
|
COMP
|
2,205.30
|
2,339.80
|
6.10%
|
|
S&P 500 Index
|
SPX
|
1,248.29
|
1,294.83
|
3.73%
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Alternative
Energy
|
ECO
|
172.97
|
227.14
|
31.32%
|
|
Energy
|
IXE
|
504.21
|
545.56
|
8.20%
|
|
Transportation
|
TRAN
|
2,438.10
|
2,625.20
|
7.67%
|
|
Capital
Goods
|
IXI
|
315.17
|
338.73
|
7.48%
|
|
Basic
Industries
|
IXB
|
312.05
|
333.65
|
6.92%
|
|
Commercial
Services
|
.SICSS
|
183.95
|
194.63
|
5.81%
|
|
Technology
|
IXT
|
211.16
|
222.96
|
5.59%
|
|
Biotech
|
BTK
|
680.91
|
712.97
|
4.71%
|
|
Health
Care
|
DRG
|
319.99
|
329.31
|
2.91%
|
|
Consumer
Services
|
IXY
|
327.54
|
336.35
|
2.69%
|
|
Financials
|
IXM
|
316.06
|
324.25
|
2.59%
|
|
Consumer
Staples
|
IXR
|
233.16
|
236.18
|
1.30%
|
|
Utilities
|
IXU
|
318.97
|
312.44
|
-2.05%
|
Source: Thomson
One Financial
In addition,
here's the equity market segment scorecard for the first quarter
of 2006 with the same caveat:
|
|
Symbol
|
12/30/05
|
03/31/06
|
% Change
|
|
REITs
|
VNQ
|
59.56
|
67.92
|
14.04%
|
|
Small
Cap. Value
|
IJS
|
63.88
|
72.59
|
13.63%
|
|
Microcap
|
IWC
|
51.15
|
58.10
|
13.59%
|
|
Small
Cap.
|
IJR
|
57.80
|
65.00
|
12.46%
|
|
Small
Cap. Growth
|
IJT
|
116.07
|
128.70
|
10.88%
|
|
MidCap
Value
|
IJJ
|
70.49
|
76.69
|
8.80%
|
|
MidCap
|
IJH
|
73.80
|
79.23
|
7.36%
|
|
MidCap
Growth
|
IJK
|
75.62
|
80.49
|
6.44%
|
|
Large
Cap. Value
|
IVE
|
65.05
|
68.85
|
5.84%
|
|
Large
Cap.
|
IVV
|
124.67
|
130.13
|
4.38%
|
|
Large
Cap. Growth
|
IVW
|
59.28
|
61.09
|
3.05%
|
Source: Thompson
One Financial
For the rest
of the year, we expect the Federal Reserve's war on inflation
in general and real estate in particular to keep a lid on the
economy. It's hard to see how Bernanke & Co. can do much about
inflation caused by the surging worldwide demand for raw materials
and when the latest Fed campaign started, our take was that it
would have little impact on inflation but would slow the economy.
Sorry to say, we've been right on both counts so far. However,
the good news is that it looks as though this cycle of Fed rate
increases is about over.

In the fixed
income market, yields rose across the board in the first quarter
with the sharpest increase on the short end. The Federal Reserve
still appears to be doing their best to make the real estate market
cry uncle by driving short-term rates well above where they'd
be if bureaucrats minded their own business. A cynic might
say that another rate increase or two will provide room for the
usual drop in interest rates once the next Presidential election
nears. In the meantime, we're staying in the intermediate part
of the bond market, buying the occasional mispriced bond, and
emphasizing quality and liquidity.
|
Current
Yield
|
12/31/05
|
3/31/06
|
%
Change
|
|
90
day Treasury Bills
|
4.08%
|
4.63%
|
13.5%
|
|
5 Year
Treasury Bonds
|
4.35%
|
4.82%
|
10.8%
|
|
10
Year Treasury Bonds
|
4.39%
|
4.86%
|
10.7%
|
Source: Bloomberg
LP
For the balance
of 2006, inflation probably isn't going away, and companies without
pricing power may have continued pressure on margins. The stronger
dollar should also make earnings comparisons for multinationals
a bit tougher. Bottom line is that earnings should still be okay,
but it will be more difficult for companies to blow away estimates
as they did last year. However, the good news is that, with real
estate under pressure, some investors may decide the stock market
looks better in comparison.
Paul Woods
is the President & CEO of Odyssey Advisors, LLC, an independent
investment advisory firm specializing in equities and fixed income
and a monthly contributor to NataliePace.com. He can be contacted at
www.odysseyadvisors.com
or 310.568.4700. Check NataliePace.com's archived ezines for other articles
by Paul!
Information
has been obtained from sources believed to be reliable however
Odyssey Advisors LLC does not warrant its completeness or accuracy.
Opinions constitute our judgment as of the date of this material
and are subject to change without notice. This material is not
intended as an offer or solicitation for the purchase or sale
of any financial instrument. Securities, financial instruments
or strategies mentioned herein may not be suitable for all investors.
Copyright
© 2006 by Odyssey Advisors LLC
|
|
DreamWorks
Animation Rewrites the Fairy Tale, Putting Three Women In Charge.
by Natalie
Pace, NataliePace.com, CEO and founder
Q&A
with Kris Leslie, DreamWorks Animation CFO.
The See Jane
Foundation notes that princesses and damsels in distress are still
the female du jour in animated films, but oddly, that is not the
case behind the scenes at the animated film powerhouse, DreamWorks
Animation, where women hold half of the power positions. (Ann
Daly is COO. Katherine Kendrick is General Counsel and Secretary,
and Kris Leslie is the CFO.) In fact, DreamWorks Animation is
the happiest place on Wall Street when it comes to gender equity.
Though Catalyst finds
that women score for corporations, posting 35.1% higher Return
On Equity at the companies with the highest representation of
women in leadership positions, most of Wall Street settles for
less performance and just 15.7% women in the corporate suite,
compared to DreamWorks' progressive 50%.
So, how does
DreamWorks Animation make the corporate environment so female-friendly?
We asked that and more of DreamWorks CFO, Kris Leslie. Kris is
an articulate, educated woman, who is also the proud mother of
three boys. With an enviable, high profile job in Hollywood, a
stable family and a great figure, Ms. Leslie is certainly
in a position to advise other women on how to achieve success
in all areas of life!
Natalie:
Kris. You are the Chief Financial Officer (CFO) of DreamWorks
Animation. You have three boys. I'm guessing that achieving that
level of success in career and family takes two lifetimes. How'd
you do it?
Coming out
of Columbia, you have three choices, investment banking, consulting
or treasury jobs. I wasn't willing to work 90 hours a week, every
weekend, with all my vacations cancelled at the last minute, so,
I went the corporate treasury route. In 1990, I began at Paramount
Pictures. I felt like the treasury job would be a lot more interesting
at an entertainment company.
You had
your first child in 1993. Was that planned?
Yes. I'm a
planner. I negotiated very hard for how much time I would have
off. I had the first child then, and had my second son two years
later.
Same job?
Same boss?
No, different
boss. But, when my second son was about six months old, the original
person who hired me at Paramount had become the COO of DreamWorks.
He called me and said, "I have a great job for you. You should
come." I thought I'd never move to California. I thought
it was too much upheaval. But my father gave me some great advice.
He said I was acting like I was 60. "You're young. Your husband's
young. Your kids are young," he said. "What's the worst
thing that can happen? If you hate it, you can come back."
The message
seems to be that you don't have to make a choice between having
a career and having a family.
Yes.
You've
referred to your boss at that time as your mentor. The difference
between the two is that your mentor invests in your success. How
do you get the person who gives you raises and promotions to become
invested in your success?
Despite my
decision that I wasn't going to work 90 hours a week, I probably
did for a while or close to it. He was the person who was blind
to level. Smart, hard workers got great opportunities. We got
invited to important meetings, even if we didn't say anything.
It allowed me to show him that he could have confidence in me.
90 hours
a week. Let's mention the statistics. You're more likely to get
a raise and a promotion, if y you work longer hours and are willing
to travelÉ
I don't travel
a great deal any more, just to meet investors and the road show.
Really, it's incredibly manageable. The hours are not the issue
either. I'm home almost every night by 7:00 for dinner.
What time
do you get into the office, and do you work weekends?
When you get
into the C-level, the hours are not the point. You never leave
the job. Before, I worked longer hours, but when I left, I left.
The biggest difference now is that the job is 24/7. Weekends,
I'm on call. I'm not working, but I'm always available to take
a call. My Blackberry and cell phone are an appendage. If I need
to make decisions for my family, or if I need to be out of the
office, it doesn't matter. But it's a trade-off. I view it as
my way of trying to be flexible.
I wrote
an article called, "Brokers
and Lovers, It Pays to Pick a Good One." How important
is it to make the right choice of a life partner and do you have
any tips?
There is no
way I could have this job without my husband. He is as close to
a 50% participant as can be. I say that not because he doesn't
try to do as much as he can, but the mother always has more of
the responsibility.
Guys don't
notice when there is no milk in the refrigerator.
He says, "I
do so much. I do more than any other husband we know." And
he's right, but here's the difference. He'll take them to the
doctor, but he won't think ahead that it's time to go. When I
say, "It's time for the shots," he can execute the plan.
It's not like he's not capable. It's all about people's expectations.
If I were hit by a bus, I'm sure my kids would get physicals every
year.
I'm constantly
thinking, "They need more fruit." I should learn to
make fresh fruit smoothies. People think I'm adding up important
numbers in these meetings, and I'm worried if there are fresh
raspberries at the Farmer's Market.
You can drive
yourself crazy. Did they get peanut butter four days a week and
other mothers give them different lunches every day? It's not
possible to be a perfect mother. It's not possible to be a perfect
CFO. I try to choose what's really important and do those things
as perfectly as I can. If they don't get fresh fruit smoothies
every day, it's not really that important.
Was there
a "do or die" moment in your career, where you had to
make a hard choice to get where you are now?
There was.
When my third son was born, I got to work and I was miserable.
I felt disorganized--that I wasn't doing a good job at home or
at the office. I obsessed about it and decided I was going to
ask for a flexible schedule. Not work Part-Time, because that
wouldn't work, but to work at home one or two days a week. I finally
worked up the courage to ask, and they said, "Absolutely.
If that's what you need." These were people I had worked
with for ten years, and they knew that I would get the job done.
If they had said, "No," I probably would have left.
The one decision that my husband and I made was that if both of
us working was a detriment for the kids, one of us would leave.
I would have left, versus him, because, the truth is, I'm a control
freak.
The message
keeps being, get your boss invested by being a great support team
and partner with him/her. If you're just doing the job and clocking
in the hoursÉ
I think that's
right. I think it's your attitude. I had such an opportunity that
it becomes circular. I wanted to do a better job. I was willing
to do anything, low-level tasks as well, and I was willing to
work when he needed me to. I still took vacations. I have kids,
so I was at home at some point, but it's about confidence and
trust. It is a risk for someone in that position to say, "OK,
you can work from home."
Were you
a natural leader as a child?
I guess maybe,
yes, but it didn't come easy. My family is very conservative and
my mom is a stay-at-home mother. At some level, you always see
yourself as right out of college or business school. I'm not sure
that is a woman thing. It was very hard to take that last step.
Sometimes I look around and think, "All these people work
for me!"
What was
hard about taking that last step?
Before, there
was always someone else responsible. There was still an expert
above me who made the hard decisions. When all the eyes in the
room are waiting for you to make the decision, that is absolutely
terrifying. Once you make a couple and nothing falls apart, then
it gets easier.
So how
important are bubble baths to maintaining this career/life balance.
Sorry, I have to ask. We know you had a few. I mean, you have
three kids.
 |
| Kristina
M. Leslie, Chief Financial Officer DreamWorks Animation SKG
|
At my worst
moment of stress, my husband is amazing. He knows not to say,
"Don't worry." That is a non-starter. Obviously I'm
worried about it. He reminds me that no one is going to die based
upon the decision I'm making. Five years from now, this is not
the thing that defines your life. He'll arrange for a night away.
He'll call and say, "I got my mom to care for the kids, and
we're going to the Ritz over night. We'll have dinner and get
massages."
He's pretty
good at planning that! Let's talk about the value of education.
I want to start very, very early. What was in your kindergarten
picture, the one you draw showing what you want to be when you
grow up?
I'm sure the
picture would have been a mother.
Your dream
came true! You are a mother. When did you gravitate to math? You
did graduate with a degree in economics.
I was a very
good student, and I knew what my strengths were. My decision-making
and life are very black and white. I feel comfortable in that
setting. I like solving problems where there are concrete answers,
as opposed to marketing, my husband's field, where things are
more grey.
With preschoolers
watching, on average, a video a day, how important is it for animated
films to portray girls doing normal things, like math? The See
Jane Foundation reports that we've still got far more Little Mermaids
than we have Mulans.
There are
so many important parts. There are their family situations. Their
friends' family situations. But I completely agree with the point,
because, at the end of the day, it's important for kids to see
all aspects of life.
So, there
is room for traditional roles and for career paths. It seems that
your message is, "Don't be judgmental. Let women and men
have choices."
One of the
hardest things is the feedback you get from other women who don't
work. They feel a lot freer to say things to me, like, "Your
job is so exciting, but I don't know how you can leave your kids!"
It would never cross my mind to say, "How can you stay at
home? You must be bored out of your mind!" I would never
say that!
You know
better! You may be bored, but you are busy as heck! Geena Davis,
the founder of the See Jane Foundation relates a story from Stuart
Little when the Assistant Director was setting up a boat race.
There were a bunch of extras. He gave all of the boys the remote
controls for the boats, and then positioned the girls behind the
boys to clap and cheer. Geena asked him if he would give half
of the remotes to the girls. Can you imagine what he said?
(Kris shakes
her head.)
"What
a great idea!" Geena, with that gorgeous smile, was not intimidating
to him, and the A.D. wasn't being malicious. He simply hadn't
thought of that, and the minute Geena brought it up, he was happy
to create that important moment on film. I remember seeing that
scene and thinking, "What a great world we live in that someone
has finally let the girls play, too!" Now this is where DreamWorks
comes in. No one had to tap your CEO on the shoulder and remind
him to give women the remote controls. Three out of six senior
executives at DreamWorks Animation are women! What's up with that?
I think our
CEO is honestly gender blind. He's about the people and about
capabilities and I don't think it ever crosses his mind that we
are all women!
So, there's
no crying in the boardroom?
It's not a
crying bunch.
Do you
think that it's important to be gender neutral at work? While
you may not cry, do you embrace your feminine qualities at work?
Yes, I think
that's important. If I have any weakness, one that keeps coming
up is that I'm not assertive enough, that I need to continue to
be assertive when people are rude or disrespectful. Entertainment
is a tough business to work in. I wasn't raised that way. I think,
"Go ahead. Have your moment." But, I'm never going to
participate in that sort of behavior.
I get that
on television as well. Some of these networks encourage pundits
to snap and bite at one another. At some point, the moderator
always stops the fight, and then says, "Natalie, what do
you think?" At which point, I muster up as much femininity
as I can to slide in my sound byte. I think in the combat zone,
the voice of calm and grace is important.
Ultimately
it's not about gender; it's about behaving professionally. I don't
cry at work, but that is because I don't think that is professional
behavior.
Have you
ever felt like crying?
Yes. Many
times. That's when I need to go into my office and shut the door.
Like going
in your room when you feel like strangling your kids, right? Or
am I the only one who ever felt that way?
No. I've felt
that way. This morning, in fact.
What's
the most fun thing about being the Chief Financial Officer? Is
there ever a moment when you close the door and say, "Yes!
Yes!" (Feel free to relate back to the bubble bath question.)
No. I don't
close my door and say, "Yes!" But I wanted to do something
that is really interesting and challenging. The CFO was a risky
job to take. It's very, very challenging.
I'm not
sure when DreamWorks will be putting out a Kris Leslie doll, but
you are definitely a role model for young women and girls. How
do you feel about that?
The world
I live in is all boys. To me, one of the most important things
I'm doing is to be a role model for my sons. If my sons were here
right now, they would think this conversation is funny - that
for some people women in important jobs is something unusual.
This is all they know: that moms and dads can both have important
jobs.
Well, Kris.
100 years ago women couldn't vote. It took 193 years to put women
on the Supreme Court. 20 years ago, no woman headed a corporation
that she didn't inherit. (Christy Hefner was one of the first
female CEOs, as the head of Playboy.) Today, about 13.6% of boards
have women, and I'm here interviewing you, the CFO of DreamWorks,
who had no affiliation with entertainment when she got her first
job at Paramount! We've come some way, and we should acknowledge
that. In today's world, we're allowed to do things differently
than women were allowed to do even 20 years ago. Can you tell
the difference between men who have been dealing with women in
leadership positions for a long time, and those who are just getting
used to having women at the table?
When we took
the company public and went on a three-week road show, during
most of those meetings, I was the only woman or one of five women.
The CEO and Chairman were both men. A lot of the men, when I would
start talking, would immediately be on their Blackberry. But a
lot weren't. I do think we've come a long way. When the CEO put
me in my position, that was a signal to others.
Is there
one final point that you wish to make for women hoping to achieve
your level of success in balancing both career and family?
I think one
of the mistakes that women make is that they don't ask for what
they need. If you are open and flexible, I think you can do both.
This is
important. To have the courage to ask, and to make sure that you
have built up the trust and confidence of your boss/mentor before
you need it, right?
If you are
so unhappy that you are thinking you have to work less or quit,
you have to ask for a flexible schedule or reduced hours. You're
there any way. I know not everybody will have the same luck that
I did when I asked, but people today invest so much time and energy
in their employees. I've spent a lot of time investing in those
people, and I would much rather work with the people I have and
trust than to have a hard, fast rule for everyone.
Kristina
Leslie has served as chief financial officer of DreamWorks Animation
SKG since its IPO in October 2004. Previously, she served in the
same capacity at DreamWorks Studios SKG since the fall of 2003.
She holds an M.B.A. from Columbia University and a B.A. in economics
from Bucknell University. DreamWorks Animation won the first-ever
Academy Award® for Best Animated Feature Film with Shrek.
Shrek 2 ended its theatrical run as not only the highest grossing
animated feature in history, but also the third highest-grossing
film of all time.
This excerpt
was taken from a keynote luncheon Q&A between Kris Leslie,
the CFO of DreamWorks, and Natalie Pace, the CEO and founder of
NataliePace.com on March 24th, 2006, at the
Inamed Academy's Women's Leadership Conference in
Sherman Oaks, California. Special thanks to the co-chairs of the
conference, Fran Lotery and Lois Phillips. If you are interested
in attending or sponsoring next year's conference or if your corporation
might be interested in promoting women's leadership in a conference
of its own, please contact info@NataliePace.com,
and we'll put you in touch with them.
|
|
My
Life as a Corporate Goddess.
by
Jane C. Rosen. (Book Excerpt)
"You
must be the change you wish to see in the world."
~
Mohandas Gandhi
"There
is sexual tension in the workplace. If only we could bottle
that energy we'd have enough to light the Strip in Vegas. Or,
perhaps women could use it to move a few corporate mountains.
Even better, let's shatter the collective glass ceiling once
and for all." Jane C. Rosen
If the Goddess
could share the Acropolis with the great Gods of Greek mythology,
then why can't she take a seat alongside the mere mortals of
the corporate boardroom? There seems to be plenty of room up
there for intelligent leadership, and God knows there are brilliant
women leaders ready to pitch in and change the world.
What exactly
is a Corporate Goddess? The mere suggestion conjures up images
of voluptuous, large breasted beauties wearing silky togas and
strappy little sandals, nibbling grapes from the hand of their
muscular Adonis-like assistant, while reviewing long scrolls
of quarterly financial reports. Nice work if you can get it.
Much like
the ancient Greek goddesses who danced in the Athenian moonlight,
the Corporate Goddess shimmies her stuff in the office fluorescents.
Destined to lead, she does so with her own style, grace and
a dash of flair. She is evident in all women who dare to howl
at the moon, who can sing "Respect" with the same
grit as Aretha, and who have the guts to follow their dreams.
This goddess
is a compelling role model for our time. She is the link between
our past and present, the universal feminine who once reigned
in both Eastern and Western cultures. She defines compassionate
leadership as well as wisdom, creativity, joy and sensuality.
She evokes personal connections to complex feminine archetypes
from our experiences with literature, theatre, philosophy, psychology
and anthropology, all of which coincide with today's executive
women trailblazers. She is the powerful feminine that compliments
the powerful masculine. And just like those statuesque, toga
wrapped beauties, she is poised to take her place at the top
of the corporate ladder, while looking fabulous, of course.
Think back
to all of the women trailblazers who went before us. They struggled
to fit into the male-dominated corporate world. Too often they
sacrificed their womanly selves to fit into the boys club simply
so they could do their jobs. They forfeited their joy, concealed
their femininity behind man-like suits, and worked their tails
off to pry open a few doors for the rest of us. They gave women
an amazing gift and thanks to them we have more opportunities
than ever before, and we no longer need to hide the fact that
we are women. We should honor them everyday by being the fabulous
Goddesses we are and by celebrating that we are uniquely different
from our male peers. I say vive le difference and let's dance
the leadership tango with a red rose between our teeth.
Granted
sexual tension is still alive and throbbing in the work place,
bringing with it a truckload of issues. Show of hands, how many
times have you felt the eyes of the guys on your ÔAphrodite'
as you walked into a meeting? How many times did a client take
comfort in your nurturing nature, telling you more than you
ever wanted to know about his personal life while the guys on
your team stood mute with their Bic in their hand? How many
times have the guys stopped talking when you entered the room
leaving you to wonder if they were talking about their mistresses
and fear you'll tell their wives? Or was it football again and
they fear you can't comprehend a first down from a touchdown?
Or, maybe, they were planning where to go for lunch and fear
you'll want to tag along.
There is
sexual tension in the workplace. If only we could bottle that
energy we'd have enough to light the Strip in Vegas. Or, perhaps
women could use it to move a few corporate mountains. Even better,
let's shatter the collective glass ceiling once and for all.
Throughout
her career, holding executive positions ranging from Director
Of
Executive Public Relations, Global Project Manager of Senior
Leadership Development,
Executive Producer, Producer and Director, Jane Rosen was usually
the only woman in the room. Her book, My Life as a Corporate
Goddess, takes a daring sacrilegious approach to the issues
women face, what they've accomplished, what hurdles remain in
the climb up the corporate ladder and, how to overcome those
hurdles in designer heels.
Rosen is
scheduled to read from My Life as a Corporate Goddess
at The Forbes
Executive Women's Forum
at The Breakers Pavilion, in Palm Beach, FL,
on May 8. She and 85 Broad's founder Janet Hanson share a 30-minute
session
preceding the presentation of the annual Forbes Trailblazer
Award
to Gloria Steinem, co-founder of Ms. Magazine. You
can purchase My Life as a Corporate Goddess by Jane C.
Rosen NOW at: http://www.mylifeasacorporategoddess.com
|
|
Great
Mother's Day Gift Idea:
by Natalie
Pace, NataliePace.com CEO and founder
ROSE-SCENTED
SUGAR SCRUB
Ingredients
4
- 24 oz. packages of turbinado sugar
8 oz.
avocado oil
8 oz. almond oil
8 oz. grapeseed oil
4 oz. jojoba oil
4 oz. Vitamin E oil
ý tsp. grapefruit seed extract
3 oz. maraschino cherries (with fluid)
5 drops concentrated rose oil
Puree cherries.
Set aside. Mix oils together. Add 5 drops of rose essence, grapefruit
seed extract and blended cherries.
Measure sugar
in desired container. Pour sugar in a separate bowl. Add oil in
a ratio of about 2 parts sugar to 1 part oil mixture. (You want
enough oil to cover but not drown the sugar.) Fold the oil into
the sugar mixture with a minimum amount of strokes (to keep the
sugar granules from dissolving). Pour the scrub into the container.
Decorate the
container, and include the recipe when you give the scrub away
as a gift.
This recipe
uses only the finest oils. The sugar exfoliates the skin, while
the oils replenish and soften the skin. Designer scrubs can cost
more than $25 for a small container, and they often rely upon
inexpensive oil bases (which aren't as luxurious for the skin
and leave an oily residue).
I love making
a batch of these scrubs for my girlfriends. Let's face it. Mothers
work very hard, and deserve to get a great, unexpected gift. And
when you spoil your friends with something made with your own
hands, they remember it! (Don't forget to make an extra scrub
for yourself.)
Peace and
love,
Natalie
|
|
From
Flipping Burgers to Owning Your Own Island.
by Natalie
Pace, NataliePace.com CEO and founder.
How
tithing 10% to Your Nest Egg will make you a millionaire, even
if you're only bringing home $30,000.
 |
| Natalie
Pace, NataliePace.com CEO and founder |
Simple math
shows that if you begin tithing 10% to yourself at age 20, you'd
be a millionaire by your 51st birthday. That's even if you start
investing when you are only making fourteen bucks an hour, and
never got a raise or a promotion in the entire 30 years of your
career. How's that, you say? Because the stock market has seen
12.5% gains over the last 25 years, meaning your money can do
most of the work for you, if you let it.
Here are the
basics. Say you make $30,000 annually and each paycheck you pay
yourself first, setting aside 10%, or $58/week, for your retirement
plan or health savings account. (And here's where your financial
planner is key, in helping you decide whether you should be initially
plugging money into an IRA, a 401 (k) or a health savings account.
Over your career, eventually, it is likely that you'll have all
three accounts - and each one of them can be diversified into
stocks, bonds and the money market for optimum gain and risk maintenance.)
Your first year's deposits would earn $375 on average, based upon
the performance of the stocks market, as measured by the 12.5%
annualized performance of the Dow Jones Wilshire 5000 for the
last 25 years. By year 10, your deposits would total $53,935.71,
with gains of $6,741.96. And this is assuming the worst-case scenario,
which is that you are still only making $14/hour, still only depositing
$3000 per year into your annual fund. Your money has really started
to work for you. While you rest easy at night, your money is depositing
over twice the amount that you deposit from your day job into
your nest egg!
By the time
you're 40, assuming you started at the age of 20, you would have
a total amount, including deposits and returns, of $229,082.25.
That year, based upon the 12.5% average, your money earned roughly
as much as you did on the year, bringing in $28,635 in returns.
By the age of 45, your money makes almost double your salary,
with gains of $57,007.80. At the age of 51, your money is making
four times your salary, at $112,517.71 returns on a nest egg valued
at roughly $900,000. At that point, flipping burgers hardly seems
worth it anymore, and you can retire to that island if you choose
to!
So, the numbers
work very much in your favor if you start investing early and
regularly. So, just do it!
You can open
an account with most online brokerages with an initial deposit
of $500. Most have a wealth of information on IRAs, 401 (k)s and
the popular new health savings accounts (funds that can be withdrawn
without penalty before retirement, in the event of a catastrophic
illness). For a list of links to major online brokerages, click
or access the online
discount brokerage listing on the Investor EDU section
of NataliePace.com.
So, step one
is definitely pay yourself first! Tithing 10% to yourself is the
most important career move you can make to a brighter future.
From there,
you need a good plan on where to invest. Here's where it gets
a little more tricky, but a few important considerations that
you need to start researching and understanding.
- Risk tolerance
- Asset allocation
- Diversification
- Exchange
Traded Funds versus Mutual Funds
- Don't get
drunk on headlines and other money-losing propositions
- Regular
check-ups
- Real estate*
- Use a small
portion to learn on (higher risk for higher gain)
- Your broker
is the most important partner decision you make, outside of
your marriage partner
And don't
forget that the Dow Jones Wilshire 5000 index (considered to be
"the stock market returns") brought in 12.5% over the
last 25 years (source: Hulbert's Financial Digest). So, simply
investing in the stock market and leaving it there is far more
important than waiting until you know everything about stocks
and/or getting too fancy about market timing or picking stocks.
So, $3000/year
brings you a nest of: (10% of $30,000 annual or $14/ hour)
|
Year
1: $3375
Year
2: $7175.88
Year
3: $11,443.36
Year
4: $16,248.78
Year
5: $21654.88
Year
6: $27,736.74
Year
7: $34,578.83
Year
8: $42,276.18
Year
9: $50,935.71
Year
10: $60,677.67
Year
11: $71,637.38
|
Year
12: $83,967.05
Year
13: $97,837.93
Year
14: $113,442.67
Year
15: $130,998.00
Year
16: $150,747.75
Year
17: $172,966.22
Year
18: $197,962.00
Year
19: $226,082.25
Year
20: $257,717.53
Year
21: $293,307.22
Year
22: $333,345.62
|
Year
23: $378,388.82
Year
24: $429,062.43
Year
25: $486,070.23
Year
26: $550,204.08
Year
27: $622,354.59
Year
28: $703,523.91
Year
29: $794,839.40
Year
30: $897,569.33
Year
31: $1,013,140.50
|
From burgers
to the beach! You've arrived!
|
|
Swim
with Zillionaire Dolphins and Avoid Zero Sharks and Tuna.
by Chellie
Campbell, author of Zero to Zillionaire
I divide the
world into two groups: My People and Not My People. My
People are DolphinsÑhappy, friendly, and rich. Not My People come
in two species: Sharks who want to eat youÑor Tuna who want to
complain to you. You can tell who's who by the way you feel after
you've been with them, and the state of your bank account. Dolphins
put money in your pocket and a song in your heart. Sharks rob
you and leave you bleeding. Tuna cry for you but can't help you.
If you want to be wealthy, you have to learn to be a Dolphin and
choose your friends and co-workers wisely. Don't borrow from a
loan shark. Don't ask unsuccessful people for career advice. Get
Zillionaire advice from Dolphins, and you'll become one yourself.
This is how
to tell which sea creatures you've been swimming with:
Dolphins:
You feel good and you are rich.
Sharks:
You feel bad and you are broke.
Tunas:
You feel tired but you broke even.
Sharks sneer
at books like this one. Why would anyone need a book to tell them
how to be successful? Kill or be killed is all you need to knowÑit's
survival of the fittest, dummy. Tuna don't read books except as
a vehicle to beat themselves up with and cry, "Oh, no, this
doesn't work for me, either. Nothing ever works for me."
Dolphins value learning and growing; they read books, take workshops,
attend classes, listen to CDs, and are always improving themselves
and the world around them.
When you
learn to surround yourself with Dolphins and avoid Shark and Tuna,
you will be richer and happier, and so will your friends. You'll
be a Zillionaire among Zillionaires.
Dolphins
Dolphins are
friendly creatures; they swim in groups called pods. They are
intelligent and communicate with each other. They are playful,
jumping for the joy of it in graceful arcs above the waves. They
have been known to ward off Shark attacks and protect other fish
in the sea.
People who
are Dolphins are generous. They love to share the wealth and always
make sure there is enough money left on the bargaining table so
that everyone feels they've made a good deal. They'd like nothing
better than for everyone in the world to be rich, but they understand
that you have to work for it. Because of this, they are wonderful
mentors and teachers and are delighted to share their secrets
of success with you. They give you honest feedback, but only when
requested. When you swim in the company of Dolphins, you feel
empowered, energized, and uplifted. You feel better about yourself
and the world around you, and you have more money, too. You will
always find Dolphins swimming alongside your golden treasure ships.
Dolphins
praise you and pay you.
Dolphins
play Win-Win.
Sharks
Sharks are
eating machines. That is their sole purpose in lifeÑeating. It's
not their faultÑthey were born like that. They are big and have
big teethÑthe-better-to-eat-you-with-my-dear. They are on
the hunt. The music plays "Do-do, do-do" and then they
pounce. The world is their oysterÑliterally. They see everyone
else in the world as dinner. That includes you.
Sharks are
sometimes rich, but don't enjoy their wealth because the word
"enough" doesn't exist in their vocabulary. Sharks don't
share with anybody, because their constant thought is "Me,
me, me, I, I, I" so there is no room at the dinner table
for anyone else except on a plate. You will see Sharks swimming
alongside pirate ships and black plague ships.
There are
two kinds of Sharks: Angry Sharks and Con-Artist Sharks.
- Angry
Sharks. They are completely self-obsessed. They have
no empathy for other peopleÑthey just can't tell that you have
thoughts and feelings just like they do. You are food. They
are angry with life and the world and are going to take it out
on you. These sharks tend to scream and yell and throw
tantrums in order to get their way. They will tell you everything
that's wrong with you if you give them an opportunityÑlike if
you say, "Hello." Powered by rage, they are fearsome
to behold. They rip you apart right away.
- Con-Artist
Sharks. They are Sharks in Dolphin's Clothing.
They pretend to be your friend and imitate Dolphin behavior
in order to get close to you. They have charisma, a hail-fellow-well-met
bonhomie, and a ready smileÑthere's no such thing as an obnoxious
con artist. But look in their eyesÑyou'll see nothing but calculation.
They are running numbers, figuring what you are worth and how
they can take advantage of you. Their offers sound so fabulous!
You suspect maybe they're too good to be true, but what if it
really is your lucky day at last and this is a fabulous opportunity
for you to get rich?? So you throw your skepticism into Davy
Jones' Locker and board their Pirate Ship to search for the
treasure. But you're the treasure and now they've got you walking
the plank into their jaws. They are your best buddyÑuntil they
slowly rip you apart.
After you've
been swimming in Shark-infested waters, you feel hurt, wounded,
and betrayed. And usually, you are broke, too.
Sharks could
pay youÑbut they don't want to. They want all the money for themselves.
Sharks play
Win-Lose.
Tunas
Tunas are
food for the Sharks. They are the Victims of the Universe,
and they wear their martyr crowns and title sashes proudly. They
talk endlessly about how awful life is and how badly they've been
treated and how it isn't their fault. It's a one-way conversationÑall
they want from you is a sympathetic "oh, you poor thing!"
now and then.
Tunas complain
a lot and don't accomplish much. They would love to share but
they can't because they're broke and could you please invest in
their business or loan them some money so they can save the world
through their non-profit organization? You will find Tunas swimming
alongside fishing boats, looking for a handout. They get hauled
in instead, and handed out to someone else. They don't get dinnerÑthey
are dinner.
Tunas come
in two species: Angry Tunas and Timid Tunas.
- Angry
Tunas. They are the "Ain't It Awful"
or "Doesn't It Suck" people who complain endlessly
about everything. They never do anything about anything,
mind you, they just whine and complain. "Life is Unfair"
and "What's the Use" are their mottos. Angry Tunas
will hurt you almost as badly as a Shark will, but they will
do it through passive-aggressive behavior. Their inaction will
cost you a contract, cost you a friendship, cost you a fortune.
And they will get huffy if you say anything to them about it,
because They Are Blameless. Nothing is ever their fault.
- Timid
Tunas. They never do anything either because
they are afraid. They mask their ineffectual behavior under
the guise of being Self-Sacrificing and Good-Hearted, but really
they are just Victims. They justify playing with Sharks saying,
"Oh, there's really a Dolphin in there somewhereÑI'm going to
help them find their inner Dolphin," meanwhile completely oblivious
to the fact that they're missing a fin and the blood in the
water is their own. Timid Tunas won't cause you direct harm,
but they will make you really, really frustrated.
Both kinds
of Tunas end up as dinner. And you'll be in the frying pan with
them, salted and breaded, if you swim with them very often. After
you've spent some time with Tunas, you feel tired, depressed,
and need to take a nap. It's hard to get anything done after that.
Tunas can't
pay you. Tunas have no money.
Angry Tunas
play Lose-Lose. Timid Tunas play Lose-Win.
Life is great
and you can have what you want! But you won't get a great life
by crying over not having one. That's a plea for negative attention
and I risk my own health and wealth if I swim with you too long.
Dolphins
are Your People. Listen. Underneath the noise and squawk of a
billion people, Dolphins are singing. Find them and swim with
them.
Chat one-on-one
with Zero
to Zillionaire author Chellie
Campbell on Wednesday, June 14th at 8:45 a.m.
PT (11:45 a.m. ET) about how to transform your dream business
into a dream come true. Learn how to make the personal changes
and personal choices (from affirmations and visualizations to
choosing great partners and staff) that will allow wealth to be
attracted to you. (Subscribers only. You can register for 90 days
free now on the NataliePace.com home page.)
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R&R
= Energy.
by Gary
Kobat.
Recharge
the old fashioned way - in a hammock.
 |
M-M
and Cary Stratton Recharging
Photo: M-M Stratton, Megorama.com
|
The greatest
remedy for being tired isÉ no, not coffee, spinning, alcohol,
espresso, chocolate bars: it's rest and sleep.
Remarkable recuperative effects are well known about rest and
sleep; an area that evidence is not demanded to prove that they
work.
We spend about
one third of our lives in sleep; without these natural restoratives
- health, fitness, and longevity are virtually impossibility.
(psst: every bit as essential as air, water, and food.) Did you
read that? Every bit as essential. It is in these periods of rest
and sleep that the body "recharges" your stores, reenergizes
itself, rebuilds, and prepares itself for renewed activity.
You would
be making a HUGE mistake to think that your nights
are any less significant than your days; at night we may appear
to be passive, but in actuality something within us is intensely
active, recharging us for the next day. When we are active, we
expend energy, when we are passive we rebuild energy.
It's interesting, maybe even sad, that we think of energy in its
expenditures, never in its accumulation. The body and all of its'
organs and processes need to be recharged, just like an electric
carÉ. recharging to preserve health, improve your outlook, get
the job done, set a personal best.
Rest
and Sleep are two essentials of energy, of life,
that are beyond description, yet unrecognized by most people.
Essentially, sleep is a period of unconsciousness, where
rest is inactivity: the curtailment of energy expenditure
which permits the body to redirect energies to restoration. Resting
or napping is virtually a bad word in this "succeed at any
cost" modern mind set. But you know, you've
experienced it before, when you close your eyes for a few moments,
you "come to" and are refreshed or invigorated; those
that can't or don't probably need a three hour nap, or even three
days off.
 |
Actor
Will Ferrell and life & fitness coach Gary Kobat Finish the
10k in Brentwood, California at a Personal Best
Photo Credit: Julia Henderson |
Drinking those
innocent cups of coffee can take up to 24 hours to pass thru one's
kidneys and urinary tract challenging your sleep patterns for
days; those who work or sleep in stale air are effected; those
who practice infrequent exercise allow waste and toxins to build
up and ferment effecting one's sleep; but by far the biggest factor
that effects one's sleep, or lack thereof, is poor FOOD
choices along with the consistent choice of an overall poor, unhealthy
lifestyle plan. The more toxic you are, the less sleep you get,
the more toxins in you, the less sleep you get, and the more superwoman
or superman choices you make (we call these "withdrawals")
without the restoratives to add back, the less you repair or recharge
for the long run for that all important day, workload, celebration,
family outing, new job, or world class race.
There is really
no such thing as oversleeping, the body will not sleep beyond
need; consciousness returns when recharging, restorative needs
have been met. But under-sleeping, ouch: an epidemic!
(talk about sabotaging one's well being) You would never think
about living without air, water, or fuel, would you? Why without
sleep or rest? Unbalanced rest and sleep are a surefire way to
put on weight, feel tired, stressed, moody, invite disease, have
poor digestion, impaired elimination, feel anxious and so on.
The hours of sleep you get before midnight are the most restful
and the most valuable! Women outnumber men, 2-1, for insomnia,
and, for sleeping pills.
Here are some
common sense rest definitionsÉ.
- Physical
rest:: sitting, laying, no physical activity.
- Sensory
rest:: close the eyes, no activity.
- Emotional
rest:: removing yourself from the ups and downs of political
or personal interactions.
- Mental
rest:: detach the mind from intellectual demands.
Remember:
resting and sleeping are not a sign of laziness, they are intelligent
and productive uses of your time. A rider on the "Tour de
France" who gets one extra hour of rest and sleep each night
accumulates 24 more hours, or a WHOLE DAY of recovery
more than their competitors by the end of the tour.
Your key energy
formula? Energy IN less energy OUT.
Review your
intake and expenditure of energy daily: It's simple
arithmetic. Create an energy balance, an energy inventory, or
energy bank account value, just like your bank balance.
What's your
energy bank balance today? No balance? Out of energy? Then no
spending please: remember, there are no credit cards or lines
of credit when it comes to energy.
Have to change
some thinking about energy? GoodÉ it just may very well change
your life.
Train smart.
Live, race. and recover smarter.
A passionate
life and fitness coach, world-class athlete, author, and keynote
speaker, Gary Kobat works one-on-one with select individuals,
customized mastermind groups, and larger goal oriented teams for
lasting personal and professional change. If you are interested
in joining a group or for a private consultation, email him directly
at: gary@e-coach.com.
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Investing
is Not Surgery. Money is not cancer. Brokers are Not Surgeons.
by Natalie
Pace, NataliePace.com CEO and founder.
Why
wise, informed, personal, daily, healthy choices keep you fiscally
fit.
If I had a
dime for every time someone used the metaphor that people do not
perform surgery on themselves as an example of why people shouldn't
learn about investing, I'd rule the world by now! Yes, I think
the average person is too green to perform surgery, but they are
not to green to eat right, exercise and stay in shape so that
they don't need the surgery in the first place. Investing is not
surgery. Money is not cancer. Brokers are not surgeons. Brokers
are salespersons, and those who try to make you think otherwise,
are not qualified to be a surgeon any way and are trying to sell
you something.
How much education
and experience does your prospective broker have? What is his/her
return rate? How many patients' portfolios have bitten the dust?
How long has s/he been in business? Has s/he ever had a complaint
filed with the NASD? These and other questions are important to
ask of anyone who wants to do surgery on your nest egg (and again,
your nest egg needs nurturing and nutrients, not surgery!). To
get the list of questions you should be using to INTERVIEW your
broker (salesperson), review the article, "Brokers
and Lovers, It Pays to Pick a Good One," on the Investor Edu
section of the NataliePace.com web site. This is step one in taking
charge. Commit to making sure that you have a talented, honest
and trustworthy financial planner.
Again, the
"investing is surgery" metaphor is a sales sound byte
that is intended to scare you into submission, not empower you,
and certainly not to enrich you. It's a tactic used to convince
you to relinquish control and put someone else in the driver's
seat of your money. A Great broker can be an invaluable PARTNER,
but there is a HUGE DIFFERENCE between giving them complete control
over your money (like you would a surgeon who is saving your life)
and between utilizing their information and experience to make
better-informed choices about where you are headed, how much risk
and return you can expect, and what you are going to invest in.
Quite simply,
money is power. If you want to change the world, one of the easiest
ways to do that is to put your money where your mouth is. Anyone
who lobbied against cigarettes and the tobacco companies would
be dismayed to know that they are very likely invested in Altria
through the mutual funds in the retirement plan. Anyone who believes
the polar ice caps are melting probably cares about supporting
"green" corporations and making sure that they are not
funding corporations that are gross polluters.
Below are
a few of the MAJOR differences between brokers and surgeons, which
helps to explain why, even if all you care about is outstanding
return on investment, you need to remain in charge of your fiscal
health and why you have to be VERY selective to ensure that you
have an honest, experienced financial partner who is promoting
your best interests.
- Education:
If investing were as difficult as surgery, brokers would go
to medical school for seven years AFTER they received
their bachelor's degree, like surgeons do. Reality: Brokers
do not have to have a Bachelor's Degree, nor do they have to
receive any advanced education degree. To receive certain designations
behind their name, they do have to pass a series of tests and
complete ongoing education. Many people do not realize this
and place far too much power in salespeople (brokers are salespeople
NOT surgeons) whom they hardly know.
- High
Turnover: Surgeons don't leave their profession in droves.
They have spent years investing in and honing their skills and
quite frankly don't know any other professional life. The turnover
rate for brokers is very high - during market downturns, as
occurred in 2002, brokerages can lose all of the staff on the
front line of their offices. Many young brokers try their hand
at financial planning because they are disheartened with another
career, and a lot opt out of financial services at the first
sign of trouble. (So, yes, a key question is how long the broker
has been in the field.)
- Commission-based
compensation: If brokers were surgeons, they'd be paid
for saving your life, not according to how many surgeries they
sold you. Professions that are highly skilled (doctors, lawyers,
architects) are paid by the hour or by the consultation, not
by selling you stuff, which is why pharmaceutical companies
can't give doctors a commission based on how many pills they
prescribe. Brokers (real estate, stock AND bond brokers) are
commission-based professionals, and thus the incentive
is to sell as much product as possible, NOT to babysit and nurture
your holdings into becoming responsible, income-earning grown-ups.
Good salespersons (what most brokers need to be) are very different
from good financial partners. The slick one that gets you the
most pumped up about what they can do for you may not be the
person to produce returns and act responsibly with your portfolio.
In fact, the honest, experienced professional who really does
want to look out for your best interests, is probably bored
with the sound bytes, and may be far more humble about what
they can achieve. Don't be fooled!
- Broker
Food Chain: The more experienced and successful brokers
move up the ladder to become money managers, vice presidents,
analysts and hedge fund managers. If you have a stock portfolio
valued at more than half a million dollars, you could qualify
for active money management. Many money managers (a higher
rung than front-line brokers) have a performance-based compensation
structure. When you make money, they make money, i.e. the healthier
they keep your nest egg, the more money they make, which puts
their incentives in line with your fiscal health. It is imperative,
even on this level, to do your homework on the potential money
manager, just as if you were looking into the fiancé
of your only daughter. Money is not the root of all evil, but
the love of money is, and you have to be extra discerning with
people who have free access to your cookie jar. Interview them
and take your job as their boss seriously.
- Healthy
Habits: It's easier to take a pill than it is to exercise
and eat right, but healthy habits are just that - good for you
-- and they enrich and prolong life. The cool thing is that
once you get off the couch, you'll find that dance classes are
pretty fun, and that your "healthy, exercised" body
naturally craves protein, veggies and fruit over chips and chocolate.
Likewise, people who exercise their money habits find that they
actually enjoy opening their monthly brokerage statements. Each
month they get to see how much they've gained! Chances are you
spend more time worrying about money than what you would getting
smart about spending, saving and investing any way. So, stop
mainlining stock charts and watching prices go up and down,
and start educating yourself on the fundamentals of sound investing.
Choose a Peter Lynch book, and subscribe to a reputable financial
publication or stock newsletter. There is a huge difference
between the wisdom of a very experienced, very successful professional,
like Peter Lynch, and some of the more "popular" pundits,
who are loud and assertive, but have never achieved his level
of investing success.
- Surgeons
Promote Good Health. Surgeons see enough disease. They
know that there is only so much they can do with their knife,
and that healthy habits go a long way to keeping people disease-free
and off their cutting table. (Stop smoking. Eat vegetables rich
in beta-carotene and protein that is rich in essential fatty
acids. Exercise.) If your broker is not giving you great money
tips, and is instead trying to convince you that your health
should be subject solely to his/her cutting knife, beware! Professionals
know that the healthier your money habits are, the easier it
is to maintain a strong portfolio. Hypochondriacs and panicked
investors are their own worst enemies, smelling disaster at
every hiccup and causing disease with stress, worry and by over-medicating.
I can't tell you how many people I know who wanted to wrestle
their portfolio away from their financial advisors in October
of 2002, the 5-year market low. (Many succeeded and lost a lot
of money as a result.) Most everyone thought it was only his
or her portfolio that was diseased, rather than a flu-rampant
winter that everyone had to get through and robust portfolios
hardly noticed.
Brokers
and Lovers:
It Pays t\o Pick a Good One
Now,
here's the kicker. Even though brokers are not surgeons, your
certified financial planner is the most important choice you'll
make, outside of your life partner! (For VERY important tips on
how to select your partner in gains, read the article in the Investor
Edu section of NataliePace.com!) Please note that online, discount
brokerages offer great information for do-it-yourself
types who want to go it alone, without a broker.
Check in next
week, when we discus a few of the ways that your broker, or online,
discount brokerage, can be invaluable.
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|
Can
Disney Bring the Magic Back?
by Anthony
Diaz
 |
| Desperate
Housewives Photo Credit: ABC-TV,
Disney |
Everyone was
feeling great with Disney stock up 17.2% year-to-date and dividends
up 28.6% since 2003. As I joined my fellow shareholders in a standing
ovation at the close of the 2006 Annual Shareholder Meeting, one
question ran through my mind: can Disney bring the magic back?
One thing is certain. As the Walt Disney Company emerges from
the darks clouds surrounding its recent corporate conflict, high-profile
lawsuits, and shareholder outcries, it's time to get back to business
and get the Mouse House in order.
It was the
first shareholder meeting hosted by Bob Iger since becoming CEO
on October 1, 2005. Polished, good-humored, and charismatic, he'd
been mending fences, establishing and nurturing alliances, and
rallying the troops with poise, credibility, and charm. He received
considerable praise from investors for his deal to get Disney
TV shows on Apple's iTunes, and also for merging Pixar into the
Disney fold. While these accomplishments are notable, it's going
to take more than a little Pixar dust to address Disney's core
operating issues.
Media Networks
Under
the leadership of Anne Sweeney, co-chair of Disney Media Networks
and president of the Disney-ABC Television Group, this segment
has been one of Disney's best performing profit centers, accounting
for 43.9% of operating income in their most recent quarter. Quoting
Bob Iger from the shareholder meeting transcript published by
Disney, "This season, half of the top 10 shows among young
adults are on ABC, including such great series as Lost,
Desperate Housewives, Grey's Anatomy and Extreme
Makeover: Home Edition. And Dancing with the Stars
was another great success for us, captivating audiences of all
ages."
Disney made
a deal with Apple to have commercial-free downloads of some of
ABC's biggest hits available for $1.99 each. Since then, the number
of ABC shows available in iTunes has grown to more than 60 programs
and Disney has enjoyed more than 7 million total paid iTunes downloads,
with one million new downloads occurring each week. The iTunes
arrangement does have its potential hazards, in particular the
problem of piracy where digital-quality episodes can find their
way into unauthorized distribution channels including bootlegged
DVDs. Soleil Media-Metrics analyst Laura Martin, CFA, said in
her research report dated February 6, 2006, "Digital technology,
with its ease and low cost of duplication, represents the dark
side of technology and a significant challenge to content owners
in the form of Intellectual Property Rights (IPR) management."
There is also the issue of cannibalization where people switch
off their TVs and watch their shows on iTunes, eliminating the
cross-promotional opportunities available on the television medium
where viewers watch other programs before and after their favorite
shows and glean information about other ABC shows, Disney theme
park promotions, or upcoming Disney motion picture releases during
commercial breaks.
Parks and
Resorts
Profit
is up considerably in the first quarter of fiscal 2006 as Hong
Kong Disneyland posted its first full quarter of operations and
the Disneyland 50th anniversary promotion drove business. This
segment will face difficult comparisons, however, as the Disneyland
50th celebration winds down this year. The key to continued success
is repeat visitation. There were a lot of people who hadn't been
to a Disney theme park in years who returned just for the 50th
celebration, and these folks need to come back more often and
bring their families and friends. An improving worldwide economy
should help. Laura Martin told me during a recent interview, "Attendance
is highly correlated to global economic health and the value of
the dollar relative to other currencies."
Studio
Entertainment
This segment has lately been an embarrassment for the Walt
Disney Company. In the fourth quarter of fiscal year 2005, it
reported an operating loss of $304 million. Things look better
in their most recent quarter with operating profit totaling $128
million, but this amounts to a mere 6.2% operating margin. Clearly,
this is the segment most in need of improvement. With Pirates
of the Caribbean II: Dead Man's Chest slated for release this
year, Studio Entertainment should see an upside, but its feature
animation, the domain where Disney once stood supreme as the unchallenged
champion, has truly lost its luster.
Last year,
there were acute concerns that Pixar was going to go with someone
else once their deal with Disney expired with this summer's release
of Cars. With Iger negotiating an agreement to buy Pixar
and integrate them into Disney's animation, worries about Disney
in the field of CGI are mitigated. But as euphoric as the reaction
to this development has been, it does not come without risk.
After the
acquisition, current Pixar CEO Steve Jobs will become a member
of Disney's board and be the largest shareholder, owning 6.5%
of the company. (Michael Eisner will be the second-largest holder
with 1.7% followed by Roy Disney with 1%). The complication in
this merger is that Jobs may appear to have greater prominence
than Bob Iger, and investors may see Jobs as the one who's really
running the show. Given Jobs' stronghold and high profile, Iger
and the rest of the Disney board may be getting more than they
bargained for if they clash with Jobs.
In summary,
Iger has had success as CEO coming out of the gate, but he's only
been at his post for a little over six months. Many are seeing
the Pixar deal as being just what the doctor ordered to get Disney
animation back on its footing, and admittedly, Pixar has had a
great run at the box office. But if a Pixar animated film flops,
it could derail the Pixar-Disney euphoria. Finally, it will take
a delicate balancing act of egos to retool Disney as the Happiest
Place on Earth, especially with two new captains of industry,
Iger and Jobs, on the same board.
Certification
and Disclosures
I,
Anthony Diaz, hereby certify that no part of my compensation was,
is, or will be, directly or indirectly, related to the specific
views expressed in this article. I also hereby disclose that I
own stock in the Walt Disney Company and have been a shareholder
for several years.
Anthony Diaz
is the Director of Research at Odyssey Advisors, LLC. He can be
reached at 310.568.4700.
Information
has been obtained from sources believed to be reliable however
Odyssey Advisors LLC does not warrant its completeness or accuracy.
Opinions constitute our judgment as of the date of this material
and are subject to change without notice. This material is not
intended as an offer or solicitation for the purchase or sale
of any financial instrument. Securities, financial instruments
or strategies mentioned herein may not be suitable for all investors.
Copyright
© 2006 by Odyssey Advisors LLC
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An
Anatomy of Bear Markets
by
Marc Faber
Today, I wish
to address the subject of bull and bear markets. This cyclical
movement in asset prices, investors will call, when prices are
rising, "bull markets" and when prices are declining "bear markets".
On the surface this seems simple to understand. The Dow goes up,
it's a "bull market", the Dow goes down it's a "bear market".
But, in reality, bull and bear markets are far more complex. Let's
assume we have just five asset classes. Real estate, stocks, bonds,
cash, and gold (or a hard currency for which money supply growth
is kept at the rate of real GDP growth leading to stable prices).
At present, it is clear that the Fed is printing money. So, all
asset prices except bonds will rise in value. But, some asset
prices will increase more than others. Since October 2002, the
Dow Jones has rallied in US dollar terms, but against gold it
has depreciated (see figure 1).

Figure 1: Dow Jones Industrial compared to Gold, 1996 - 2006
Source: www.decisionpoint.com
So, we can
say that, yes, the Dow has been in a bull market since October
2002 in dollar terms, but it has been in a bear market in gold
terms. This is an important point to understand. In case we should
experience continuous monetary inflation, which could lift, over
time, all asset prices such as stocks, real estate, and commodities,
some asset classes will increase more in value than others. This
means that some asset classes while rising in value could deflate
against other asset classes, such as happened with the Dow against
gold since year 2000. I have pointed out in earlier reports that
since 2002, all asset prices rose in value. But recently, some
diverging performances emerged. Bonds started to decline and seem
to be on the verge of a significant long term break down (see
figure 2).

Figure 2: 20 Year Treasury Bond Fund (Leh) iShare (TLT), 2003
-2006
Source: www.decisionpoint.com
I have also
mentioned in earlier reports that, in times of monetary and credit
inflation, such as we have now in the US, bonds are the worst
possible long term investment.
Another asset
class, which has recently begun to depreciate against gold are
home prices (see figure 3)

Figure 3: US Home Prices in US dollars and in Gold
Source: The
Value Gold Report
As can be
seen from figure 3, since last summer, home prices while only
declining moderately in dollar terms, have declined significantly
in terms of gold. So, whereas it took over 500 ounces of gold
to buy a typical house in the US last summer, now, it only takes
around 380 ounces of gold. In other words, home prices have declined
over the last 9 months by 25% against the price of gold!
What I really
want every reader to understand is that bull and bear markets
are extremely complex and an asset class, which seems to be in
a bull market may not necessary be in a bull market when compared
to a hard currency such as gold. In this respect the following
is also important to consider.
Conventional
wisdom has it that a true market bottom, which offers an once-in-a-lifetime
buying opportunities, only occurs after a devastating bear market.
In this context, the following severe market declines usually
spring to investors' minds: the 1929-1932 bear market in US equities;
the collapse in the US bond market between 1970 and 1981, when
yields on 30-year US Treasuries rose from 6% in 1970 to 15.84%
in September 1981 and sent bond prices tumbling; the 1973-1974
Hong Kong stock bear market, which brought the Hang Seng Index
down by 90% to its December 1974 low at 150; the great sugar bear
market, which sent prices down from 70 cents per pound in 1973
to 2.5 cents in 1985; or the Japanese bear market post-1989, when
the Nikkei dropped from 39,000 to less than 8,000 in April 2003.
Moreover, major market lows are associated by investors with total
despair and panic among market participants, depression in the
asset class that was subjected to the bear market, bankruptcies
in that sector, and overwhelming negative sentiment.
But, as Russell
Napier shows in his recently published book Anatomy of the
Bear -- Learning from Wall Street's Four Great Bottoms the
key element in undervaluation can also be a period of time "when
the advance in stock prices has failed to keep pace with the economic
and earnings growth" within the system (The book - an excellent
read - is available from Amazon.com or from CLSA directly. Contact
victoria.tang@clsa.com).
Napier shows,
for instance, that at the market low in 1921 the Dow Jones Industrial
Average was no higher than it had been in 1899 -- 22 years earlier
-- while nominal GDP had increased by 383% and real GDP by 88%!
Similarly, by August 1982, the Dow Jones Industrial Average was
no higher than it had been in April 1964, and was down by 70%
in real or inflation-adjusted terms. According to Napier, August
1982 represented the fourth-best buying opportunity for US equities
in the last century, aside from 1921, 1932, and 1949 (see figure
4). The important message one might take from Napier's book
is that it usually takes a long time -- about 14 years -- for
stocks to travel from overvaluation to undervaluation, and that
the nominal low in stock prices isn't always the best time to
buy equities. What is more important is the real level of
equity prices and various valuation parameters that indicate deep
undervaluation. Thus, while the Dow Jones bottomed out on December
9, 1974 at 570, and stood at 769 at its August 9, 1982 low, in
real terms the Dow had lost another 15% since the 1974 low (see
figure 4).

Figure 4: Dow Jones Industrial Average in Real Terms, 1884 - 2006
Source: Ron
Griess, www.thechartstore.com
I am mentioning
this because it is possible that the October 2002 lows for the
US stock indices will hold in nominal terms. However, as I have
shown above, the Dow has been declining in gold terms since 2000
(see figure 1) and is, in my opinion, likely to continue to do
so for many years. As a side, Russell Napier has filled a void
with Anatomy of the Bear, since, to my knowledge, it is
the first book to trace the swings from undervaluation to overvaluation
and back to undervaluation, of US stock prices over the past 100
years. The book also provides much food for thought. If equity
prices swing back and forth between overvaluation and undervaluation,
other asset markets such as real estate, commodities, and bonds
will do the same. Thus, I suppose that, in the same way that US
bonds were grossly overvalued in the 1940s, Japanese bonds were
grossly overvalued in June 2003, when the yield on JGBs had declined
to less than 0.50%. At the same time, the April 2003 low for the
Nikkei Index at less than 8,000 may have been the best buying
opportunity in Japan of this generation. In fact, the 2003 lows
in Japanese equity prices and interest rates have similarities
to the 1940s' lows in US equities and interest rates. After the
1940s, US stocks rallied into 1973, but bond prices collapsed
into 1981. Similarly, the stock market rally in Japan, which began
in 2003, could last for many years and be accompanied by a significant
bear market in Japanese bonds, which would drive local institutions
and Japanese households out of their overweight bond and cash
positions, which benefited during the 1990s' deflation, and into
equities and real estate. Moreover, if, as Napier explains, 1921,
1932, 1949, and 1982 provided outstanding buying opportunities
for achieving subsequent high returns that tended to last for
a minimum of eight years (1921-1929), but usually for much longer
(1982-2000), then I suppose that -- taking the late April 2003
low of Japanese equities as a generational low -- the bull market
in Japanese equities could easily last until at least 2010 or
even longer, and in the process significantly outperform US equities.
Another lesson
from Napier's book could very well be that other Asian equity
markets, relative to other assets, remain grossly undervalued
despite their post-1998 recovery. After all, many Asian stock
markets, whether in US dollar terms or in real terms, are still
down by more than 50% from the highs reached between 1990 and
1994.
Lastly, if,
as Napier outlines, it takes about 14 years for equities to make
the journey from overvaluation to undervaluation, the severity
of the commodities bear market from 1980 to the turn of the millennium
-- about 20 years -- is evident. Put into the proper perspective,
in real terms (inflation-adjusted) commodity prices were, in the
1998-2001 period, at the lowest level in the history of capitalism
(see Figure 5). And, although I expect some industrial commodity
prices will suffer from a significant phase of profit taking in
2006, given the fact that commodity bull markets tend to last
anywhere from 20 to 30 years, we may just be at the beginning
of an extended rise in the price of natural resources.

Figure 5: Real Raw Industrial Prices, 1800 -2006
Source: The
Bank Credit Analyst
There is another
point I should like to add to Russell Napier's excellent study,
which I strongly recommend investors to read. In a world of rapid
monetary and credit expansion, an undervaluation of the Dow Jones
might occur, with a Dow Jones at 36,000, 40,000, or 100,000 or
more -- a stock price level that was predicted by several analysts
in 1999. How so?
At present,
the Dow is at around 11,000 and the price of gold is at $590.
Let us assume that, as a result of Mr. Bernanke's more efficient
paper money printing machine (incidentally, a machine that has
been in operation since the formation of the Federal Reserve Board
in 1913 and which accounts for the dollar's 92% loss in purchasing
power since then), the Dow Jones rises to 36,000 in the next few
years. (It won't take another 100 years for the US dollar to lose
another 92% of its purchasing power; more likely is 10 to 20 years.)
If this were the case, the price of gold could rise from $550
to $3,600, which would bring down the Dow/gold ratio from currently
about 19 to 10; or, in an extreme case, gold could rise to $36,000,
which would bring down the Dow/gold ratio to only 1 (as was the
case in 1932 and in 1980).
Thus, in nominal
terms, the Dow would have trebled from the present level, but
lost significantly in real terms -- a possibility that I regard
as very likely. In this respect, we shouldn't forget that during
the German hyperinflation period between 1919 and 1923, share
prices rose sharply in paper mark terms but tumbled in dollar
terms (then a strong currency), because the rate of the paper
mark depreciation against the US dollar exceeded the local share
appreciation. Thus, by October 1922, an index of shares in local
paper mark terms had increased from 100 in 1918 to 171 billion,
while in dollar terms the same index had dropped from 100 to 2.72!
Needless to say, the 1918-1923 German hyperinflation was devastating
for paper mark cash and bondholders.
Now, I am
not necessarily predicting that we shall soon experience hyperinflation
rates in the US, but when the Dow Jones and the US housing market
will decline by 10%, it is very probable that Mr. Bernanke will
put the money printing presses into high gear in order to fight
asset deflation. So, US asset prices including homes, stocks and
bonds could depreciate in real terms and against precious metals.
Still,
as I indicated last month, aside from bonds, all stock and commodity
markets seem to be now overbought and vulnerable to a sharp correction.
In fact, whereas I am extremely negative about bonds in the long
term, I believe that for the next three months or so, bonds could
actually outperform equities and also commodities. From figure
6, we can see that equities have formed a rising wedge against
bonds since 2005. More often than not, a rising wedge leads to
a sharp downside reversal. This would not necessarily imply that
bond prices will rally much, but the wedge might be broken on
the downside by a sharp downturn in equities.

Figure 6: Global Stocks relative to Global Bonds, 2005 - 2006
Source: Rolf
Bertschi, www.credit-suisse.com/techresearch
For this reason,
my advice remains to be extremely defensive. Most asset markets
including stocks and commodities are extremely overbought, and
there is far too much speculation in all investment markets. Therefore,
severe downside volatility, also in precious metals, should not
be surprising in the period directly ahead.
Marc Faber
GloomBoomDoom.com
Dr
Marc Faber is editor of the Gloom
Boom & Doom Report and the
author of Tomorrow's
Gold: Asia's Age of Discovery.
Dr
Faber is a contrarian. To be a good contrarian, you need to know
what you are contrary about. It helps to be a world class economic
historian, to have been a trader and managing director of Drexel
Burnham Lambert when the firm was the junk bond king of Wall Street,
to have lived in Hong Kong for a quarter of a century, and to
have a contact book crammed with the home numbers of many of the
movers and shakers in the financial world.
Famous
for his approach to investing, Marc Faber does not run with the
bulls or bait the bears but steers his own course through the
maelstrom of international finance markets. In 1987 he warned
his clients to cash out before Black Monday on Wall Street. He
made them handsome profits by forecasting the burst in the Japanese
Bubble in 1990. He correctly predicted the collapse in US gaming
stocks in 1993; and he foresaw the Asia-Pacific financial crisis
of 1997/98 and the resulting global volatility.
|
|
NASDAQ
Doubles Up on the DOW.
by Natalie
Pace, NataliePace.com CEO and founder.
 |
| Natalie
Pace, NataliePace.com CEO and founder. |
The stock
market has rewarded investors 12.3% annually over the past 25
years (source: Hulbert's Financial Digest). Not bad! For your
nest egg, it pays to prune and fertilize, more than to actively
trade because trying to get too fancy, for most people, is usually
a money-losing proposition and taking a long view is plenty rewarding.
However, because the markets have been volatile but largely flat
over the last two and a half years, for your short-term portfolio,
seasoned investors are looking to short-term gains for better
performance. NASDAQ and the S&P 500 have brought in 13% and
10.5% gains (respectively) in 16 months (or 9.75% and 7.9% each
year), while the Dow is dragging along at 5.25% per year. By contrast,
stock newsletters and money magazines, like NataliePace.com, are reporting
much higher returns, with the companies featured in NataliePace.com turning
in over 55% gains each year (source: TipsTraders.com).
| |
High
2000
|
Range
4.21.06
|
Gain/Loss
Since
High 2000
|
Gains/Loss
Since
Jan. 2005
|
|
NASDAQ
|
5,048.62
|
2,342.86
|
-54%
|
+13%
|
|
Dow
Jones Industrial Avg.
|
11,722.98
|
11,347.45
|
-3%
|
+7%
|
|
S&P500
|
1,881
|
1,311.28
|
-30%
|
+10.5%
|
|
AMEX
Composite
|
890
|
2,017.63
|
+127%
|
+41%
|
With the Dow
Jones Industrial Average hovering near its 2000 high, there are
certainly more blue chips to sell than there are to buy. On the
other hand, the Amex Composite Index has shot up 120% since January
2000 and ETFs (which are concentrated in the AMEX) are still gaining
in popularity, which means that transferring from mutual funds
into ETFs might be a good call. In addition to the momentum, you
are also benefiting from lower management costs and brokerage
fees. If you want to invest in ETFs on your own, online
discount brokerages make it easy to gather important
asset allocation and diversification information and to invest.
I also recommend that you read Paul Woods' excellent article,
ÒWhat
the Mutual Fund Salesman neglected to Mention,Ó for the case
of ETFs over mutual funds.
Because there
is a lot of risk in the markets (high valuation in the Dow, terrorism,
rising interest rates, inflation and moderated GDP growth projections),
you should make sure that you have a defensive position, particularly
in your long-term stock portfolio, that you don't have too much
exposure to the stock market (or real estate), and that you have
sufficient liquidity on hand to get you through inflation and
rising interest rates. Liquidity is one easy form of hedging,
and also means you're prepared for any "buying" opportunity
that may arise. The money markets are handing out bond-like returns
with no risk. Meet with your financial planner to discuss trimming
back on your DOW holdings and faded Blue Chips and increasing
your money markets holdings.
NataliePace.com contributing
writers have written several articles over the last year about
the risks associated with the DOW (over-valued, lots of mature
blue chips with "legacy" concerns). On the other hand,
NASDAQ is still over 50% off of its 2000 high, many of the companies
are cash-rich this time around, corporations have begun to invest
in infrastructure and unemployment is at a low. That means more
computers and software being bought, which is good for technology
companies, according to a number of highly regarded analysts,
including Smith Barney's Tobias Levkovich. (See this month's quote
of the month.)
So, sell in
May and go away for the annual summer doldrums? Nah, just do a
little pruning and make sure you've got enough liquidity on hand
in case things dry up over the summer.
S&P
500 Index Average Total Returns 1928-2002
| 1 Year
Before Presidential Election |
19.69% |
| Year
of Presidential Election |
13.52% |
| 1 Year
After Presidential Election |
7.45% |
| 2 Years
After Presidential Election |
8.65% |
| Overall
Average 12.28% |
|
Stats,
Facts, Quotes and Educational Information:
- There
are great and important conferences and events coming up this
month, including the Forbes' Executive Women's Conference in
Florida (5.8.06), the meeting of the Federal Reserve Board (5.10.06),
the Nomadic Museum in Santa Monica, CA, and Mother's Day (5.14.06).
For more information, visit the NataliePace.com calendar
at www.NataliePace.com.
- Higher
Interest Rates. The Federal Open Market Committee decided
on 3.28.06 to raise its target for the federal funds rate by
25 basis points to 4-3/4 percent, for the 15th consecutive rate
hike. While the minutes state that "further policy firming may
be needed," Bernanke testified before Congress on 4.27.06 that
Òat some point in the future the Committee may decide to take
no action at one or more meetings in the interest of allowing
more time to receive information relevant to the outlook.Ó The
next FOMC meeting is scheduled for Wednesday, May 10, 2006.
Click to review the FOMC
Minutes from the March 27th and 28th, 2006 meeting.
- Don't
Buy High. The Dow Jones Industrial Average and the S&P
500 are trading close to their historical highs set back in
2000, while the NASDAQ is still almost 50% off from the highs
set back in March of 2000. Investors are still feeling the burn
from the NASDAQ crash, but corporations are not. Technology
is on a number of analyst's lists for being in favor, while
blue chips have a concentration of the corporations that are
suffering from "legacy costs." It may be time to lick
old wounds and rummage through the research of your old favorite
Internet and Information Technology stocks again, while trimming
back your exposure on legacy corporations with structural challenges,
like automakers, defense contractors, airlines, and/or any corporation
established before 1980 that still has a defined-benefit plan
(and unions).
- Real
estate is on everyone's bubble warning list, but one
thing to remember is that we haven't received the international
vote yet. Just when you think that our high end US real estate
is over-valued, the foreign capital moves in! We're seeing that
with the Dubai ports situation. There is a lot of interest abroad
to buy U.S. real estate. The last time real estate skyrocketed,
in the 1980s, the foreign capital, then Japanese, moved into
the most desirable locations. Beverly Hills and Rockefeller
Center benefited more than San Bernardino, California and Peoria,
Illinois. We'll start hearing more about foreigners wanting
to diversify and own hard American assets. The U.S. ranks pretty
high on the most desirable countries to live in, in the world.
The Federal
Reserve Board Open Market Committee (FOMC)
Minutes from 3.28.06 noted that, "Anecdotal
reports from several markets, surveys of homebuyer attitudes,
and data on inventories, home sales, and new home cancellation
rates all pointed to a moderation in housing activity. Going
forward, participants expected a deceleration in house prices
to contribute to an increase in the household saving rate and
to weigh on consumption growth."
- 20 BIG
WINNERS, which keeps the companies featured in NataliePace.com at the
top in Annualized Returns (according to TipsTraders.com). This
hot news article still has the proud honor of featuring twenty
companies that have posted positive gains, versus just six that
have gone south. Of the six that have gone south, we were most
concerned with Krispy Kreme, but with the hiring of Kraft
Foods veteran Daryl Brewster as president and chief executive
that company seems to be sweetening up. Investors bought in
on the news, pushing the price near its 52-week high. Turnarounds
are difficult to stomach, even the turnaround of the most popular
sweet on the planet. Lawsuits and challenges remain. For OSI
Pharmaceuticals, Sirius Satellite Radio and Yahoo, current prices
are buying opportunities. Sometimes it takes awhile for the
rest of the investment world to realize that. Still love Jet
Blue as a consumer, but the sector is in trouble until they
figure out how to fly solar-powered planes. Tried to hang with
Martha Stewart Omniliving, but, despite a recent jump in ad
revenue, the flops were adding up more than sales.
Bottom
Line: NataliePace.com is providing you with news and important information,
but you need to consult your financial planner to determine your
best strategy for using the information. That will depend upon
your age, your retirement plan, and your risk tolerance and portfolio
diversification. The stock portion of your portfolio is a higher
risk classification, where you ideally seek to gain higher returns.
As the NASD said in a recent investor alert, don't bet the farm
on the stock market. NataliePace.com is NOT a brokerage and doesn't operate
or act like one. We are an online media service with a mission
of providing the news and information you need to make better
choices in business, investing and personal prosperity. Always
consult a trusted financial professional before buying or selling
any security.
Full disclosure:
I have listed the companies that I own under the column "NP OWNS?"
Hot
Stocks
Investors
who "never pay retail," note that highlighted stocks are trading
at their 52-week lows or near the price featured in NataliePace.com's
article. It may be a good buying opportunity. The companies that
are listed below which are not highlighted may not be in a good
buying range, but they appear to be poised to continue performing
well. There are never any guarantees in life, and all stocks are
risk-based investments. Consult your certified financial planner
before making any changes to your investment strategy.
|
Company
|
NP
owns?
|
Symbol
|
Price
when featured
|
Price
4.21.06
|
Year
High
Year
Low
|
Gains
since original feature
|
|
Automatic
Data Processing
|
NO
|
ADP
|
$46.84
|
$45.71
|
48.11
40.37
|
-2.4%
|
|
See
the article in the vol. 2 iss. 11 ezine, entitled, "Harvesting
ProfitsÉ" Morgan Stanley analyst David Togut lists
ADP as "overweight." 2Q results were just under
forecasts, at $2.15 billion in sales (expectations were
$2.17 sales). 17.5 percent gain in quarterly net profit.
The company's earnings rose to $259.7 million, or 45 cents
per share, from $250.1 million, or 42 cents per share, a
year earlier. On 1.24.06, ADP added an automated accounts
payable management solution, which streamlines AP, while
at the same time simplifying Sarbanes-Oxley compliance.
Sold its claims services business to Solera Inc. for $975
million in cash, on 2.9.06. There should be a one-time gain
next quarter of $450 million from the sell, but 2006 full
year earnings are expected to fall by up to 2 cents per
share, with a loss of 7 cents per share in 2007. 3Q results
will be released on 4.28.06 before the opening bell.
|
|
Bioteq
Environmental Technologies
VERY
HIGH RISK
Penny
Stock in a great sector.
|
NO
|
TSX:
BQE
(Note
this is only traded on the Toronto Exchange)
|
$.80
|
$1.50
|
$1.60
$.66
|
87.5%
|
|
Water
treatment and metals recovery for acid-contaminated water
in mining ind. BioteQ's customers include Jiangxi Copper
(China), Breakwater Resources, Falconbridge, and Phelps
Dodge. This company is only trading on the Toronto Stock
Exchange's TSX. Go to Bioteq.CA for more info. If your stomach
is lined with steel, this could be a fun, rewarding, high-risk
bet. Annual Shareholder's Meeting is scheduled for May 1,
2006. More details to follow. On 3.29.06, Bioteq signed
a million dollar deal to clean up acid-contaminated water
in CO after the FDA approved the Bioteq technology as the
preferred tech for the site. On 4.12.06, Bioteq issued director,
employee and consultant stock options to purchase up to
800,000 common shares in the capital of the Company at a
price of $1.34 per share expiring April 6, 2011.
|
|
Blockbuster
VERY
HIGH RISK
|
No
|
BBI
|
$3.61
|
$4.81
|
$10.65
$
3.19
|
+33%
|
|
See
vol. 3, issue 4, "Blockbuster Sale." Very high
risk. Distressed acquisition play in a heated up M&A
environment? On 4.10, Citigroup Analyst Citigroup analyst
Tony Wible said in a client note, "While we believe the
in store rental industry continues to be under pressure
from video-on-demand and online rental services, we see
Blockbuster as best positioned in this environment." He
gave BBI a Buy, with a target of $5.75.
|
|
U.S.
Global Investors Eastern Europe
|
No
|
EUROX
|
$33.87
|
$50.20
|
$50.20
$23.02
|
+48%
|
|
Vanguard
seems to be in the right countries, and, within those countries,
in the right, growing sectors. See vol. 2, issue 8. Great
way to diversify, as well as to add growth. Eastern EU economy
rocks. Western EU economy stalls. Your international fund
should reflect the difference!
|
|
Disney
|
No.
|
DIS
|
$25.08
|
$27.02
|
29.00
22.89
|
+7%
|
|
Disney
receives a Buy rating at $26.40 from Soleil Media-Metrics.
Disney/Pixar/ABC, distributed by Apple iTunes = dream partnerships
of the future. Just purchased Pixar, and along with it got
Steve Jobs as the largest individual shareholder (with 7%
of the company's stock). HmmmÉ The most successful animation
film company meets the most successful family media company
meets the most successful new media device, the iPod. Hmmm.
Sounds like the happiest place on Earth to us. Produces
Lost and Desperate Housewives and you don't
have to be either to know they are huge hits for the company..
At the Milken Global Conference on 4.26.06, Bob Iger said
that content from The Walt Disney Company had resulted in
over 7 million downloads sold on iTunes, with approximately
one million downloads occurring per week. As the largest
individual stockholder, Steve Jobs may be the prime candidate
for the new Chairman of the Board. On 4.11.06, ABC TV began
airing Lost, Desperate Housewives, Commander in Chief
and Alias episodes on the ABC web site, and Bob
Iger is describing himself as "aggressive" about
finding new ways to distribute film and TV. "I'm thoroughly
pleased with what ABC did and we're going to do more of
it as a company on other sites" Bob Iger said.
|
|
Gevity
Human Resources
|
No
|
GVHR
|
$26.48
|
$26.05
|
$30.19
$15.45
|
Flat
|
|
See
the article in the vol. 2 iss. 11 ezine, entitled, "Harvesting
ProfitsÉ" Roy C. King became President and COO on 12.20.05,
responsible for sales, marketing and biz development. Participated
in the NASDAQ inaugural Small-Cap Investor Conference on
2.7.06 in London. Missed earnings on 2.28.06, but expects
double-digit growth in revenues, client employee count and
earnings in 2006. Increased dividend and plans to buy back
a million shares in 2006. 1st Q call will be
on 5.1.06 at 10:30 a.m. ET.
|
|
Goldcorp
|
No
|
GG
|
$11.25
|
$32.95
|
$32.95
$12.04
|
193%
|
|
1Q
results will be released on 5.15.06 after markets close.
Share prices are high, but gold is in favor on most analysts'
lists this year. Also, Ollanta Humala is leading the presidential
election in Peru, as of 4.17.06, and GoldCorp investors
will be happier than Newmont Mining investors, if he is
elected. Humala has pledged to renegotiate the contracts
of foreign mining and oil companies in Peru, rewrite the
Constitution to take away powers from the ruling classes,
and legalize farming of coca. That renegotiation would likely
include Yanacocha gold mine, 51% owned by Newmont. Any troubles
in the already tight metals market could send prices even
higher than they currently are. 2006 production at Goldcorp
is expected to reach 2 million ounces at a total cash cost
of less than $150 per ounce, with 2.4 million ounces produced
in 2007. As of Dec. 31, 2006, Goldcorp, including the Nevada
Placer Dome interest, had 25.3 million ounces of Proven
and Probable reserves. On 3.5.06, Goldcorp announced record
net earnings of $286 million ($0.91 per share) for 2005,
an increase of 460% compared with $51 million ($0.27 per
share) in 2004. Record fourth quarter net earnings of $102
million ($0.30 per share), compared to 2004 earnings of
$15 million ($0.08 per share). 2005 gold production increased
to 1,136,300 ounces (2004 - 628,000 ounces) and gold sales
more than tripled to 1,344,600 ounces at a total cash cost
of $22 per ounce (2004- 427,600 ounces at $115 per ounce).
|
|
ImClone
(makers
of Erbitux)
See
volume 2, issue 6 for a feature article
Trading
near 52 week low.
|
No
|
IMCL
|
$34.48
|
$34.95
|
87.24
29.51
|
Flat
|
|
Beat
earnings estimates on 4.26.06. ET. Forced to pay the IRS
$32 million to settle an employment audit (3.16.06). Hired
investment bank Lazard LLC to shop the company to suitors
and appointed board member Joseph L. Fischer as interim
CEO. Fischer was Former Senior Vice President, Dial Corporation
and Former Group President, Corporate Controller, Johnson
& Johnson. Reported 4Q Erbitux sales totaled $121.2
million, compared with an analyst consensus of $114 million,
and a profit of $13.1 million, or 15 cents per share, compared
to a loss a year ago. Total revenues for the full year ended
December 31, 2005 were $382.9 million compared with $388.7
million for the full year 2004. Net income for the full
year 2005 was $98.9 million with diluted income per share
of $1.14 compared with $113.7 million, or $1.33 per share,
in 2004. The FDA approved the use of Erbitux on head and
neck cancer on 3.1.06. Results from study are impressive
and the EU commission just received a positive opinion from
their committee, on 2.23.06, to grant approval in Europe.
New panitumumab drug from Amgen is predicted to gain market
share of colorectal cancer in about three to four years,
though it is not expected to gain approval and product launch
before 3Q 2006. Swissmedic, the Swiss agency for therapeutic
products, approved Erbitux for head and neck cancer on 12.22.05.
IMC-11F8, a new drug that blocks the activation of epidermal
growth factor receptor, should have its clinical trial enrolled
by the 2nd half of this year. IMClone just won
the right to market outside the US and Canada in an arbitration
with Merck.
|
|
Krispy
Kreme
RISK:
VERY HIGH
In
turnaround mode. Trading at 5 year lows.
Taken
off S&P Midcap 400 effective 10.27.05.
|
NO
|
KKD
|
$10.22
|
$8.69
|
32.70
4.40
|
-14.9%
|
|
Hired
Kraft Foods veteran Daryl Brewster as president and chief
executive in March 2006 (sparking a rally). He was previously
the head of Kraft Inc.'s $6 billion North American snacks
and cereals business. KKD got an extension on its 12.15
deadline to file financials with the SEC, but faces NYSE
delisting after April 30, 2006, if they don't get the reports
in on time. Don't forget that Michael Sutton, the former
chief accountant for the SEC, is on KKD's board. Turnarounds
like this are very hard on the stomach. This high-risk investment
is only for the seasoned investor with nerves of steel.
Even with the financials all screwed up, current sales are
likely above the market capitalization of $539.7 Million.
|
|
Las
Vegas Sands Corp.
Read
Vol. 2, Iss. 7
The
Venetian, Sands Macao
(1st
mover advantage in China's Vegas!!)`
|
No
|
LVS
|
$37.43
|
$63.97
|
66.92
29.08
|
+71%
|
|
The
Venetian, The Palazzo (2Q '07), The Sands Macao, The Venetian
Macao (1Q '07). 97% occupancy rates at the Venetian. Las
Vegas Sands Corp. is also making deals with other Macao
hotels to manage their casinos and show rooms, including
the Four Seasons, Intercontinental Hotel, Holiday Inn, Far
East's Cosmopolitan and Dorsett, Shangri-La Hotel Macau
and the Traders Hotel Macau, all on the Cotai Strip in Macao.
Earnings on 2.14.06 were record 2005 net revenues of $1.74
billion, an increase of 45.4% over the prior year. Net income
in 2005 was $283.7 million, or $0.80 per diluted share compared
to full year net income of $495.2 million, or $1.52 per
diluted share in 2004. (2004 included $417.6 million for
sale of the Grand Canal Shopping Mall.) Looking to secure
a $2.5 billion credit facility to develop "Asia's Las
Vegas™" in Macao. YeowÉ Yeehaw! CEO Sheldon G.
Adelson plans to sell 42.8 million shares, worth approximately
$2 billion, after selling $366 million on 9.13.05, for trust
diversification purposes. This will reduce his personal
stake in the company from 75.3 percent to 63.2 percent,
which should be viewed as a positive more than a negative,
although investors typically get spooked when the founder
sells. To put this in perspective another founder, Bill
Gates, sells over a billion each year to fund the Bill and
Melinda Gates Foundation, without causing a twitter in the
financial markets. Adelson has to sell if he's positioning
the corporation to be more attractive to institutional investors
and for listing on a major index. 1Q 2006 earnings will
be announced on 5.4.06 after the close of trading.
|
|
NetGear
RISK:
MEDIUM
Trading
in mid-range. Growth company. Volatile share price.
|
No
|
NTGR
|
$12.42
|
$18.55
|
$25.73
$12.96
|
+49%
|
|
Beat
earnings estimates on 4.26.06. ON 1.16.06, when NTGR announced
a deal with Skype (owned by eBay) to offer Wi-Fi Internet
phones. An October report from Jupiter Research predicted
that 20.4 million U.S. households will subscribe to some
form of Internet-based broadband phone service by 2010.
More information on Netgear's Skype Wi-Fi phone, including
pricing and availability, is planned for the first quarter
of 2006. BusinessWeek named NTGR as one of its 100 Hot Growth
Companies. Judges from the IT Industry and CRN Readers Rated
NETGEAR Best in Service and Support Among Crowded Networking
Category that Included Companies Worldwide with Both Voice
and Data Legacies in Dec. 2005. 4Q earnings missed expectations
by a penny, largely due to not keeping up with supply. Net
income was $8.9 million versus $8.6 million a year ago,
with per-share earnings flat at 26 cents. According to CEO
Patrick Lo, they have 58 new products.
|
|
News
Corp.
Vol.
2, iss. 10
Owns
Fox, Myspace and DirecTv.
Dividends
|
No
|
NWS.A
|
$15.88
|
$16.67
|
18.88
13.94
|
+5%
|
|
Featured
article, "News Corp. Enters New Media," from vol.
2, iss. 10. Investors will start taking notice of this undervalued
juggernaut, especially once MySpace revenues start hitting
the books. Myspace is 2nd in page views online,
behind Yahoo!, which should start translating into a major
jump in ad revenue this year, especially since MySpace's
core demographic is the coveted 16-34 year olds. MySpace
is now a Top 10 Global Internet Brand. Media is in favor
for 2006, according to Smith Barney analysts. Murdoch has
been quoted as saying that MySpace and IGN Entertainment
will be his leading drivers of growth in coming years. Mobizzo,
Fox's mobile network, which pioneered text voting on American
Idol, launched on 2.27.06, and will have micro-pay downloads
of films and TV (including Napoleon Dynamite, the
Fox cult film), games music and more. $54 billion market
cap on sales of $24.5 billion, vs. Google's $119 billion
MC on sales of $6.1 billion. 2QOperating Income WAS $920
Million, as Revenues IncreaseD to $6.7 Billion; Income from
Continuing Operations Increased to $694 Million, per 2.8.06
earnings release.
|
|
Opsware
See
issue 44. 1st featured Dec. 2002.
RISK:
MEDIUM
|
No
|
OPSW
|
$1.80
|
$8.40
|
$9.25
$3.90
|
366%
|
|
It
was announced on 2.13.06 that Cisco will distribute Opsware's
products worldwide and that the companies will collaborate
on advanced network management solutions built on Opsware's
Network Automation System, which sent a rocket through Opsware's
share price. Net revenue for the year ending 1.31.06 was
$61.077 million, 61% higher than last year's net revenue
of $37.8 million. Unfortunately, the net loss also doubled,
from $7.2 million last year to $14.75 million in 2006. Investors
still seem optimistic that the Cisco deal will bring profitability
to this six-year old company that has never turned a profit.
A case can be made for pulling out or sticking with it,
depending on your gains! Marc Andreessen is Opsware Inc.'s
largest individual beneficial shareholder with approximately
10.1 million shares beneficially owned.
|
|
OSI
Pharmaceuticals
RISK:
MEDIUM/HIGH
Trading
near 52-week low.
NataliePace.com's
2005 Company of the Year 2005. Read vol. 1, iss. 56.
|
YES
|
OSIP
|
$63.59
|
$26.39
|
98.70
22.57
|
-59%
|
|
Announces
1Q results on 5.8.06 at 5:00 p.m. ET. Annual shareholder's
meeting will be on June 14, 2006. On Feb. 9th,
the BOD made the bylaws more shareholder friendly, in the
hopes of attracting back investors. Genetic based "cancer
pill." 1st and only of its kind. FDA-Approved
Tarceva for lung cancer last November. Canadian regulators
approved Tarceva on 7.13.05. European approval granted on
9.21. Switzerland approved Tarceva in March 2005. FDA approved
Tarceva for use with pancreatic patients on 9.13.05. Submitted
new drug application to Japanese FDA on 4.17.06. Partner
of Genentech (DNA) and Roche. Total world-wide net sales
of Tarceva(R) (erlotinib) for 2005 were $309 million. Total
U.S. sales of Macugen(R) (pegaptanib sodium injection) for
2005 were $185 million. Total revenues for OSIP in 2005
were $174.2 million, an increase of $130.4 million or 298%
compared to revenues of $43.8 million for 2004. The Company
reported a net loss of -$157.1 million (or -$3.02 per share)
for fiscal 2005 compared with a net loss of -$268.6 million
(or -$6.36 per share) for the 12 month period ending December
31, 2004. Ended 2005 with in excess of $150 million in cash
and investments on its balance sheet. According to Genentech's
earnings report on Tuesday, 4.18.06, U.S. sales of Tarceva(R)
(erlotinib) increased 94% to $93 million, from $48 million
in 1Q 2005, its first full quarter of sales. Sequential
quarter-over-quarter Tarceva sales increased 11% from fourth
quarter 2005 sales of $84 million.
|
|
RELM
wireless
10.70
P/E
Micro
Cap
96.38
Million
(high
risk)
|
NO
|
RWC
|
$7.35
|
$9.80
|
11.70
1.90
|
+33%
|
|
$2.35
million in new orders in January from state government agencies,
for 1Q delivery. $9.9 million in new orders in 10.05 for
4th Q 2005 delivery. For the quarter ended December
31, 2005, sales increased appx. 61.5% to $9.0 million, compared
to $5.6 million for the same quarter last year. Net income
for the fourth quarter was approximately $8.3 million, or
$0.58 per diluted share, compared to net income of $6.6
million, or $0.50 per diluted share, last year. For 2005,
sales increased approximately 38.1% to $28.5 million, compared
to $20.7 million for 2004. Net income for 2005 was $10.3
million, or $0.75 per diluted share, compared to net income
of $7.9 million, or $0.65 per diluted share, for 2004. Two-way
land mobile radios (LMRs), for govt and public safety. According
to Feltl & Co. analyst Richard Ryan, RELM has just 1%
share of a domestic market worth $1.9 billion (and the global
market is eight times larger), so there is plenty of room
for growth. Coverage on MoneyCentral.msn.com on 1.18.06
means it might come up on more investors' radars.
|
|
Rio
Tinto (ADR)
Based
in England
DIVIDENDS!
See
issue 48
RISK:
LOW
|
NO
|
RTP
|
$89.60
|
$225.84
|
230.68
114.90
|
152%
|
|
Ollanta
Humala is leading the presidential election in Peru, as
of 4.17.06, and Rio Tinto investors should be happier than
Newmont Mining investors if Humala wins. Humala has pledged
to renegotiate the contracts of foreign mining and oil companies
in Peru, rewrite the Constitution to take away powers from
the ruling classes, and legalize farming of coca. That renegotiation
would likely include Yanacocha gold mine, 51% owned by Newmont.
Any troubles in the already tight metals market could send
prices even higher than they currently are. Metals demand
is huge; supply is limited; stock price is high. Analysts
say pressure on price should continue on high demand in
China and Asia, as well as the high cost of mining. Due
to the commodities crunch, gear, personnel and materials
are in high demand and at a premium cost, however Rio Tinto
is a very well managed corporation. Finds, processes and
mines minerals: copper, iron, coke (from coal), aluminum,
titanium dioxide and diamonds, and has increased investment
in the Cortez Hills of Nevada. Rio Tinto has been added
to Jim Jubak's 50 Best Stocks in the World List (eff. 9.05).
Great press usually means more buyers. Hang on, and enjoy
the dividends, but don't get sucked into buying high.
As long as Jubak keeps RTP rich in headlines, expect investors
to keep buying high. Earnings reported on 2.2.06. Net earnings
were $5.215 billion compared with $3.297 billion in 2004.
$1.5 billion special dividend (equivalent to $1.10 per share),
and a share buyback program totaling $2.5 billion by the
end of 2007 were announced. Investments in growth totaled
$2.552 billion. Landslide in Indonesia spooked the commodities
market and spiked copper prices in London and Shanghai on
3.27.06, on speculation that the mid-March fatal landslide
at the Freeport-McMoRan Copper & Gold Grasberg mine
may disrupt output. The Grasberg mine in Indonesia is the
second largest copper mine in the world. Peru's outlook
only spooks everyone more about the metals crunch. Rio Tinto
has mines in Brazil, Chile and Argentina, but not Peru.
Most of RTP's mines are in Australia and the US.
|
|
Sirius
|
YES
|
SIRI
|
$6.02
|
$5.00
|
7.98
3.72
|
-17%
|
|
Announces
1Q earnings on 5.2.06 before the market open. Sirius aired
the Super Bowl; XM signed Oprah. The head-to-head competition
in the U.S. continues, while WorldSpace offers satellite
radio to Asia, Europe, Africa and the Middle East. Howard
Stern has paid off (big-time) in subscribers and online
hits for Sirius, but not new investors (yet) for Sirius.
Sirius announced on 12.27.05 that it topped 3 million subscribers,
and then surpassed 4 million subs on 3.20.06, and is on
track to finish the year strong with at least 6 million
subs (or more), yet the share price is 33% off of its 52-week
high. XM Satellite Radio ended 2005 with 5.9 million subscribers
and is projecting 9 million by year's end. XM radio is installed
in GM cars; GM is losing market share and having biz cash
flow issues. Could impact XM. Mercedes just agreed to make
SIRI standard on SL and CL models for 2007. Caris &
Co. analyst Susan Kalla says Sirius "may be able to bring
down subscriber acquisition costs to $100 per sub, leading
to a breakeven in 2006." Kalla said Sirius could reach about
16 million subscribers by 2010, and predicts a 2007 cash
break-even point for XMSR, with 18 million subscribers by
2010. The company issued and registered 34 million shares,
worth more than $200 million, to Stern and his agent the
week of Jan. 13, 2006. Nielsen//NetRatings report said the
online traffic to Sirius' grew 188%, to 1.9 million in March
2006 from 666,000 unique visitors in the year-ago period.
That beats XMSR traffic, which turned in 1.69 million in
unique visitors in March.
|
|
Sohu
|
No
|
SOHU
|
$17.52
|
$26.41
|
27.42
14.25
|
+51%
|
|
Beat
earnings estimates on 4.26.06. "China Internet is the most
dynamic industry within the world's fastest-growing major
economy, in our analysis," according to Michael Tieu, a
Brean Murray Carret & Co. analyst. Tieu noted that while
China's online advertising market is a rounding error of
that of the United States, its ad sales are forecast to
grow 40 percent a year to about $3 billion in 2010. Beat
earnings on February 6, 2006, and offered year-end expectations
that analysts are calling conservative. See NataliePace.com ezines,
vol. 3, issue 4 and volume 2, issue 9 for feature articles
on Sohu. Financial Times ranked Sohu in Top 10 Chinese
Global Corporate Brands on 9.6.05. (6 days after our article.)
SOHU selected as the official sponsor of Internet Content
Service (ICS) for the Beijing 2008 Olympic Games. See Sohu
CEO in an exclusive interview on the Forbes.com Video Network
(with NataliePace.com CEO, Natalie Pace) by going to the NataliePace.com
home page and clicking on the Forbes.com logo. Is offering
FIFA World Cup 2006 online video content in China to Internet
and mobile phone users (a large segment of the Chinese connected
population).
|
|
T.
Rowe Price Em Eur & Mediterranean
See
Vol. 2, iss. 8
|
No
|
TREMX
|
$20.72
|
$30.15
|
$30.15
$12.00
|
+45.5%
|
|
See
vol. 3, issue 4 and vol. 2, issue 8 for articles on why
Eastern EU rocks, while Western EU stalls. Great way to
diversify, as well as to add growth. Go global with the
emerging countries. Avoid the countries in the EU that are
stalling in economic growth.
|
|
U.S.
Gold
VERY
HIGH RISK
|
Yes
|
USGL
|
$5.05
|
$8.40
|
$10.30
$.35
|
+66%
|
|
See
the feature interview with CEO and Chairman Rob McEwen in
NataliePace.com ezine, vol. 3, iss. 2. This is a gold exploration
company that is being traded off the big boards. If the
choice is between this and the craps table, you might have
better odds here (and more fun if McEwen strikes gold.)
Note: U.S. Gold is not producing gold at this time. They
are digging to find a new reserve. U.S. Gold closed the
private placement of 16,700,000 subscription receipts at
a price of US$4.50 for aggregate gross proceeds of US$75.15
million on Feb. 22, 2006. As of 4.14.06, there were 50 million
shares outstanding, with a market capitalization of US $409.5
million.
|
|
Verisign,
Vol.
2, iss. 9
|
No
|
VRSN
|
$21.91
|
$24.43
|
$36.09
$17.02
|
+11.5%
|
|
Fourth-quarter
net income rose to $271.4 million, or $1.06 cents per share,
from $114.8 million, or 43 cents per share, a year ago (1.26.05
release), boosted by sale of online payment system in the
amount of $252 million. Warned that 1Q call would miss expectations
due to price cuts to win customers and problems in the mobile
content area. VeriSign reported total revenue of $374
million for the first quarter of 2006, and GAAP net income
of $16 million for 1Q 2006 on 4.20.06. Repurchased 9
million shares for value of $215 million in the 3rd
Q. Revenue shortfall in the mobile content area is expected
to improve, according to CEO. Michelle Guthrie, CEO of STAR
Group, Ltd. (a division of News Corp.) was named to the
Board on 12.19.05. Annual analyst day on 5.25.06 at corporate
offices. Purchased m-Qube, a leading mobile channel enabler
that helps companies develop, deliver and bill for mobile
content, applications and messaging services on 3.20.06.
Now has the digital content platform to enable carriers,
Internet portals, media companies and consumer brands to
provide anytime, anywhere, any device delivery of mobile
and broadband services.
|
|
Yahoo
Vol.
2, iss. 10
|
No
|
YHOO
|
$33.84
|
$32.89
|
43.66
29.75
|
-2.8%
|
|
See
featured article, "News Corp. Enters New Media,"
from vol. 2, iss. 10. Yahoo is the #1 web site, with more
traffic, page views and time online than MSN or Google.
Revenues were $1,567 million for the first quarter of 2006,
a 34 percent increase compared to $1,174 million for the
same period of 2005. Net income was $160 million, compared
to $205 million or $0.14 per diluted share for the same
period of 2005 (4.18.06 earnings report.) Don't be fooled
by headlines that focus only on search. Yahoo is still number
one on the worldwide web, though Google and Microsoft have
the worldwide war chests, with market caps of $129.9 billion
and $281.9 billion respectively, compared to Yahoo's $46.63
billion. So why is Google's market capitalization over twice
the size of Yahoo's? Do investors really think Google is
twice as valuable? Reuters reported on 4.14.06 that Terry
Semel, who took over as CEO of Yahoo five years ago, cashed
in Yahoo shares worth appx. $429 million between 2003 and
2005.
|
Stocks
in Profit-Taking Range. Note: The news is still favorable on some
of these companies (so far) for the long-term (as in Genentech
and Google), which means if you have them in your 401K or long-term
portfolio, you might want to keep them there. However, for the
trading portion of your portfolio, in a market of modest gains
but high volatility, many analysts recommend taking profits in
shorter windows. A gain is a gain. We may look to add some of
these great companies to our hot news list again, if the price
point should become attractive (as we did NetGear in March).
|
Company
|
NP
owns?
|
Symbol
|
Price
when featured
|
Price
4.21.06
|
52-week
High
52-week
Low
|
Gains/Loss
|
|
Genentech
|
No
|
DNA
|
$13.50
|
$79.69
|
$100.20
$68.20
|
+490%
|
|
Great
Blue Chip Hold for your long-term portfolio. Biotechnology
is a volatile sector. Popular. #2 biotechnology company.
But very pricey. P/E: 69.20.
|
|
Google
|
No
|
GOOG
|
$85
|
$437.10
|
$475.11
$172.57
|
+414%
|
|
Google
joined the S&P500 on 3.31.06. Great Blue Chip Hold for
your long-term portfolio. Buy in at a better price. If you're
drinking the Kool-Aid and want an IT play that is trading
at a better value, look at Yahoo, Sohu and/or some of the
other IT media companies (Disney and News Corp.), all of
which are listed above. If you've quadrupled your money,
profit taking and capital gains are attractive these days.
Announced 4Q earnings on 1.31.06. Missed expectations,
and investors panicked (as we'd warned they would). Google
shares sank 12 percent in after-hours trading to $379.00,
losing roughly $15.3 billion from their $128 billion market
capitalization. Google dropped as low as $344.20 on 2.13.06.
Very volatile. High price and high P/E of 80.10 (compared
to Yahoo's P/E of 24.30). Reports on 3.29.06 say that Google
is spending a billion to buy a 5% stake in AOL, which would
allow them to share AIM, text messaging and video content.
Beat earnings estimates on 4.20.06.
|
|
LifeCell
Vol.
1, iss. 55
Price
12.28.05:
$19.21
|
No
|
LIFC
|
$10.25
|
$23.17
|
$25.00
$7.18
|
+126%
|
|
The
FDA issued a warning on "unscreened human tissue"
on 10.26.05. LifeCell reported a recall of products, and
took a charge of $1.4 million in 3Q to reflect the recall.
LifeCell's product is in high demand and sales are growing,
however the story on some of the unscreened and untested
tissue it received from Biomedical Tissue Services is not
over. Lawsuits have been filed by some plaintiffs who unknowingly
received products from Biomedical Tissue services and the
impact of those lawsuits is still largely unknown. According
to the Associated Press, the FDA shut down BMT for not screening
the tissue for communicable diseases, among other violations.
The Alloderm product is in high demand, but the potential
fallout of this unfortunate turn of events is more than
most $688 million companies can take. $15.5 million in
insider sales by CEO, CFO and controller in last 12 months,
most recent sales occurred in March. '06. Product revenues
for the fourth quarter were $27.0 million, up 69%, compared
to $16.0 million reported for the same period in 2004. Product
revenues for full year 2005 were $93.3 million, up 59%,
compared to $58.8 million in 2004. Alloderm accounted for
$73.8 million of the sales. Net income for 2005 was $12.0
million, or $.36 per diluted share, compared to net income
of $7.2 million, or $.22 per diluted share income in the
prior year.
|
|
Martha
Stewart Omniliving*
RISK:
MEDIUM
Management
says ad revenue is back, and merchandising is heating up.
|
NO
|
MSO
|
$25.91
|
$19.95
|
$37.45
$8.25
|
-23%
|
|
The
public fired Martha's Apprentice show, and Martha's
daytime show isn't becoming the next Oprah. Revenues for
the year ended December 31, 2005, were $209.5 million, compared
to $187.4 million for the year ended December 31, 2004.
Operating loss was $(78.3) million for the year ended December
31, 2005, compared to $(60.0) million for the year ended
December 31, 2004. Martha is building homes with KB Home,
and launching a 24/7 channel on Sirius. The company is also
launching another magazine aimed at young women called BluePrint.
It's hard to get too excited about these projects, however,
when it is clear that Martha's comeback was a flop and when
ad dollars are abandoning print for new media. Sometimes
you have to just stop the loss and try something else. We
love Martha's recipes and hold no grudges. Beat earnings
estimates on 4.25.06.
|
|
Sony
|
No
|
SNE
|
$33.85
|
$51.95
|
$52.29
$31.80
|
+53%
|
|
Sony's
good news that they would turn a small profit this year,
instead of posting a loss, gave investors more hope for
a turnaround than might be warranted. We originally featured
the Sony turnaround in Dec. 2003, only to watch the company
falter with its PlayStation and handheld music products.
Recent earnings gains, largely on flat screen TVs, are in
a very price competitive space and the new Sony music gizmo
is not enjoying the popularity of the iPod. If you didn't
sell when PSX bit the dust, this is a great chance to get
out with some gains on your side. Sony reported a 17.5 percent
gain in quarterly net profit on 1.26.06.
|
|
Sunoco
Price
12.28.05:
$79.42
|
No
|
SUN
|
$34.50
|
$87.14
|
$97.25
$46.08
|
+152.6%
|
|
Shut
down its LaPorte and Bayport, TX polypropylene facilities
and evacuated all its non-essential personnel in TX on 9.22,
due to Hurricane Rita. 4Q net income fell $5.7 million due
to unusual events, including the impact of Hurricane Rita
and a relocation, the company added. Full Year net income
totaled $63.2 million, or $2.40 per unit, compared with
$57 million, or $2.27 per unit, in 2004. Revenue totaled
$4.5 billion up 30 percent from $3.46 billion. Annual meeting
5.4.06. "We project U.S. refining margins will remain strong
in 2006, albeit down from 2005 highs," predicts Standard
& Poor's Equity Research analyst Tina Vital. Deutsche
Bank analyst Paul Sankey noted that Sunoco -- along with
rival ConocoPhillips -- is one of the largest buyers of
African and European crude oils, which are trading at historic
highs. Paying through the nose for crude crimps profitability.
|
Please
note: NataliePace.com does not act or operate like a broker. We are
a media and information center. This article is intended to educate
and inform individual investors, and, thus, to give investors
a competitive edge in their personal decision-making. The publicly
traded companies mentioned in this article are not intended to
be buy or sell recommendations. ALWAYS do your research and/or
consult an experienced, reputable financial professional before
buying or selling any security.
Other
articles of interest:
Are
GM, Delphi and Delta the Beginning of Japan-like Stagnation for
the U.S.? Q&A with Nobel
Laureate Economist Gary Becker. By Natalie Pace.
Want
a Raise Now?
It
Could Be a Check Mark Away. by Maya Patel.
The
Eastern European Renaissance.
This
Year's "It" Investment. Article and Stock Report Card by Natalie
Pace.
Leave
Your Job, Not Your 401(k)
By Maya Patel. Discount Brokerages Make Rollover
IRAs Easy.
NASD
Investor Alert:
Putting Too Much Stock in Your Company - A 401(k) Problem
What
the Mutual Fund Salesman
Forgot to Mention. by Paul Woods, President & CEO
of Odyssey Advisors, LLC.
IMPORTANT
DISCLAIMER: Information has been obtained from sources believed
to be reliable however NataliePace.com LLC does not warrant its completeness
or accuracy. Opinions constitute our judgment as of the date of
this publication and are subject to change without notice. This
material is not intended as an offer or solicitation for the purchase
or sale of any financial instrument. Securities, financial instruments
or strategies mentioned herein may not be suitable for all investors.
|
|
VISION:
To build a global community of investors through a worldwide website,
seminars, radio, television and print partners.
GOAL: To provide high-quality, first-run, ethical financial news,
information and education, presented in an entertaining format,
across all media (television, radio, print and online).
MISSION: To provide the news, information and education investors
need to make better choices and to make investing as much fun
as shopping.
PHILOSOPHY: Member Mosaic. Piecing together a more complete picture
of the publicly traded company, one tile at a time, by valuing
firsthand consumer experience, conducting evaluations of the executive
team and lining up the numbers of the publicly-traded company
with its competitors in a Stock Report Card.
For more information on NataliePace.com contact us at www.NataliePace.com,
P.O. Box 1350, Santa Monica, CA 90406-1350
or 1-866.476.7442 (toll-free telephone number).
NOTICE:
NataliePace.com is NOT a stock brokerage service, and does not operate
or act as one.
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