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ACCESS A PRINTABLE COPY OF THIS NEWSLETTER CLICK HERE.

Vol.6 Issue 12, December 1st, 2009
Send comments and suggestions or get more information
at info@NataliePace.com
QUOTE OF THE MONTH: "Since freedom is a basic tenet of your
being, then coming into alignment with money will help you establish
a balanced footing that will be of value to you in all other aspects
of your experience."
Abraham-Hicks
Excerpted from the book Money and the Law of Attraction: Learning
to
Attract Health, Wealth and Happiness.
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- Kill The Bill. What's Missing from the Health Care Reform
Debate. Q&A with Dr. Gary Becker, Nobel Prize winning
economist.
- Best Holiday Gifts - From $10 to $1000.
By Staff. The Latest and Greatest For Guys, Girls and
Even Toddlers.
- Real
Estate: Welcome To The Underworld.
. By Steve Dietrich. Time to Fix Your Loan!
- Gold Will Hit $5,000 an Ounce,
According to 20-year Veteran Gold CEO Rob McEwen.
Learn 10 Ways to Build Your Personal Fort Knox. By Natalie
Pace.
- AOL. From Bomb of the New Economy to Deal of the
Decade. . By Natalie Pace. Includes a New
Media Stock Report Card.
- Enthusiasm... By Gary Kobat..
- Don't Invest in Things You Hate.
By Natalie Pace. 3 Ways to Avoid the Next Wall Street
Disaster.
- Ban Your Bra (at least part of the time).
By Dr. Anna Walden, ND, DNM, MH, CNHP, HealthWalk Vital
Hematology. Is Your Underwear Making You Sick?
- Municipal Bonds-Staying on the Safe Side of the
Street in Rough Times. A FINRA Investor Alert.
- Medical Bills: The Biggest Risk to Your Retirement.
By Rande Spiegelman, CPA, CFP®, Vice President of Financial
Planning, Schwab Center for Financial Research.
- You Vs. Wall Street. By
Natalie Pace. Includes my Hot News on Cool Stocks List.
- NataliePace.com Calendar:
The #1 Gift of the Holiday Season Is Just $10 and Can
Be Delivered Right to Their Door!
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Kill
The Bill. What’s Missing from the Health Care Reform Debate.
by Natalie
Pace.
Q&A
with Dr. Gary Becker, Nobel Prize winning economist.
The health care
reform debate is scheduled to begin in the Senate on Monday, December
1, 2009. However, the most important considerations are missing
from the discussion, according to the Nobel Prize winning economist,
Dr. Gary Becker.
Below is a conversation
I had in the University of Chicago office of Dr. Gary Becker, on
November 13, 2009. It was a crisp, cool Friday the 13th,
but the bad luck that will weigh upon the U.S. with the current
health care reform bill is far from superstition. According to Dr.
Becker, the bill, if passed, will not do much to help the uninsured,
and could slow the recovery of an already fragile economy. On the
other hand, the four steps that Dr. Becker suggests could go a long
way to promote healthier Americans, better coverage and a healthier
American bottom line, to boot.
Natalie Pace:
The health reform debate is scheduled to begin in the Senate on
November 30, 2009. Are you for or against the bill?
The health care
bill is 1200 pages. I can’t say I’ve read it! I don’t know if it’s
going to get passed. There is a lot of uncertainty in the Senate.
It’s safe
to say that nobody is going to read 1200 pages, including the people
in charge of trying to implement the plan…
There are a
lot of things I don’t like about it. For example, reforms that I
would have pushed are: 1) I would have separated health coverage
from employment. This is one of the defects of the American system.
Other countries do not have that. The bill doesn’t contain any change
along those lines.
So that Americans
don’t have to worry about loss of coverage and/or pre-existing conditions
when they switch jobs, right?
Yes. 2) I would
make it so that older people pay a bigger share of Medicare. Maybe
we’ll get some of that, but so far, not much in that direction.
Older people
who can afford to pay more, right, not every senior?
Right. 3) I
would cover the uninsured by requiring them to buy catastrophic
coverage. Most of the uninsured are young people, many with jobs,
who decide it’s too costly to buy insurance. These people should
be required to buy catastrophic insurance so that if they get seriously
ill, the rest of us don’t have to support them.
That’s an
interesting approach. Having younger people purchase at least catastrophic
coverage is a source of revenue that has traditionally been overlooked.
I’m hearing more of this now in the debate now, but with so many
college grads out of work and living at home, I’m not sure that’s
a burden they can bear…
We would continue
to support the poorer members in that group with government subsidy.
4) I would encourage Health Savings Accounts.
Most of this
is not in the present bill. I don’t think it’s a very good bill.
If you have
the extra revenue of young people and the average person saving
money for medical costs in a Health Savings Plan, that could go
a long way to bridging the funding gap, couldn’t it?
I think it would
be very useful. The great advantage of Health Savings Accounts is
that if you don’t use it, you can carry it forward for many years.
You can invest it. You have the incentive to economize health spending
because your money keeps growing, earning gains and interest and
you can carry it forward to retirement.
So… it becomes
part of your net worth…
It gives you
the incentive to economize your health spending to that which is
really necessary. Health savings accounts work best with catastrophic
health insurance, with a pretty big deductible, like $2000. Then
you pay for the smaller expenses yourself. The bigger expenses are
covered and if you can economize your spending, you can carry forward
the money you don’t spend.
How can we
help the Small Business Owners of America? They seem to be suffering
the most these days.
I’m always in
favor of lower taxes. We have a very high corporate income tax in
the United States, one of the highest in the world. That should
be cut, not increased. Instead of raising taxes on people with big
incomes, I would cut those taxes and cut taxes in general.
Under the
theory that money trickles down into the small business through
spending?
I would stimulate
the economy with tax cuts, not with government spending. There are
a lot of problems with government spending. There are time lags.
We authorized the stimulus spending a while back, but have only
spent $150-$170 billion so far.
When you
look at all of the free/easy money we’ve created, the boom/bust
cycles of the past decade. What’s the next challenge going forward?
The economy
did very well, overall, from 1990 to 2007. The average world economy
over that period of time did very well. One should not minimize
the accomplishments of that period.
But inflation
is bound to be a problem in the future, don’t you think?
Inflation will
be a problem, but not yet. We’ve created a lot of excess reserve.
Inflation will become a problem when banks start lending a lot more,
and money supply is increasing. Then you’ll get inflationary pressures.
And then the Fed is going to have a challenge.
China and
the amount of Treasury Bills they own. Is that an asset or a threat?
I don’t think
it’s a threat. It ties them in with us. It’s a result of having
big trade imbalances. The question is, "Is it good for China
to have so much assets?"
Is it a bigger
problem for China than it is for the U.S.? You’ve indicated in your
blog that it wasn’t very good for Japan.
I think China
has more assets than is good for the country. For the U.S., it’s
a threat if they start trying to unload them. That will affect interest
rates here. But they don’t have much of an incentive to do that.
It’s the opposite. They are now tying their currency to the dollar.
There is a lot of pressure to let the Yuan increase in value relative
to other currencies. The Chief Economist says that China shouldn’t
do that. I don’t think they have very good alternatives.
So, is it
good for the world that China is saving so much, while the rest
of the world is borrowing?
Americans are
beginning to save more because they realize that housing prices
are not going to keep rising forever. The market is down compared
to its peak, so they’re going to increase their savings. I think
that’s healthy. But China is still going to have a surplus with
the U.S. in trading for a number of years going forward. When Japan
had a surplus with the U.S. it wasn’t bad for the U.S. and I don’t
think it’s bad for the U.S. now.
What happens
if China starts unloading Treasury Bills?
Well, you’ll
have higher interest rates. The price of the Treasury Bills goes
down and interest rates go up. The price of the national debt becomes
greater and the cost of borrowing money in general increases. We
won’t be the only ones affected by that. The world will be. I don’t
see that they have the incentive to do it though. What else are
they going to do?
Dr.
Gary Becker is a University Professor, Department
of Economics, and Sociology Professor, Graduate School of Business,
The University of Chicago. He won the Nobel Prize in Economics in
1992 for his groundbreaking work in "human capital." President George
W. Bush awarded him the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 2007.
To keep track
of Dr. Becker's continuing research and commentary, visit his web
site and blog.
To hear more of his research and recommendations for strengthening
the U.S. economy, check out the 2009 Milken Global Economic Conference
web page. Dr. Gary Becker has been a keynote speaker at the conference
every year since it began and spoke at two of the luncheon keynotes
in April 2009.
About
Natalie Pace:
Natalie Pace, is the author of You
Vs. Wall Street
and host of the Modern Girl’s Guide to Sex, Love and Money
radio show on BlogTalkRadio.com/NataliePace!
Follow her on Twitter.com/NataliePace,
YouTube.com/NataliePaceDOTCOM
and Facebook.com/NatalieWynnePace.
For more information please visit, http://www.nataliepace.com.
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Best
Holidays Gifts – From $10 to $1000.
by Staff.
The
Latest and Greatest For Guys, Girls and Even Toddlers.
From iPhone,
iPod and Pandora accessories to the latest Wii mania, make sure
that you’re in the know on the latest/greatest in holiday options
before you lock in on your gift!
Below are some
great ideas that we hope will help you save money and get creative
as well.
Top
Gifts $10 Range
1.
You
Vs. Wall Street. The must-read financial Bible,
according to readers, over half of which give it five out of five
stars. The number one thing everyone wants this year is to
save more, spend less, reduce debt and win on Wall Street. This
book reveals how to grow what you’ve got and win back what you lost.
Works as a great stocking stuffer for your college grad (who needs
to learn how to budget better), gifts for your friends (to beat
the Street) and maybe even something you’ll slip in your own stocking
as well (financial wisdom is an asset that never goes down in value).
2. Sugar
Scrub. If you’re willing to get your hands a little oily, one
of the most desired gifts under the tree will be home-made sugar
scrubs (for the gals) and massage oil (for the guys). Check your
local Co-op or Costco for low-priced, high quality oils. Buy the
plastic containers at your local dollar store. Spend 30 minutes
making up a batch of eight! FYI: Don’t scrimp on the sugar, however,
thinking that rock salt is cheaper. It burns when applied to shaved
skin! I’ve listed the recipe at the end of this article.
3. The
Alchemist and Warrior
of the Light. Two exceptional books by Paolo Coelho.
Great for the enlightened man in your life.
4. Massage
and Pampering. Each year, we poll the guys on their top gift
of choice, and time and time again it comes back the same. Massage
and pampering. So, spend a few cents on a great piece of paper and
a calligraphy pen to write up a Certificate for One Massage (without
the kids), make some massage oil (recipe below), and give your sacred
beloved companion a night he’ll never forget.
Top
Gifts $20 Range
1.
Norma’s
cookbook. The most popular breakfast spot on the planet
now reveals their orgasmic recipes. From Chocolate Decadence French
Toast to the Zillion Dollar Lobster Frittata, this is a must-have
for any gourmand. For those of you living in or visiting New York
City, Norma’s is located in the Parker Meridien, two blocks from
Central Park. Have your breakfast experience (but be sure to call
in advance for reservations) and then walk off the calories...
2. Celebrity
Cotton Shirts. 100% of the net profits of all Make It Right
merchandise (which are sexy enough for Brad Pitt and Angelina Jolie
to wear) go to building homes in New Orleans. While you’re on the
Make
It Right NOLA website, check out the world’s first new
Floating Home that was designed by Brad Pitt’s architect Thom Mayne.
3. Wii
Fit Plus. A fun and exciting way to experience fitness,
with over 60 activities and exercises.
Top
Gifts $50-$200 Range
1.
Livio
Radio featuring Pandora. Access Internet radio and Pandora
through this portable radio. More importantly for guys, it has a
jack that you can plug into a great speaker system.
2. New
Winter Coat. I was recently shopping for a new winter coat and
found an excellent designer wool for less money than I’d spent a
decade ago! Wow. In fact, the price was so low that my boyfriend
thought I was overlooking a zero. So, check out the amazing discounts
(up to 40%) at your local department store.
3.
Ferrari
Store. Whether you’re into Ferrari sunglasses or a wallet
for your guy or a Ferrari trike for your toddler, the Ferrari store
can pack extra into ordinary.
4. iPhone/iPod
speaker
cube or clock
radio. Whether you dock by your bed or want the portability
of taking the cube with you into the bathroom, having a portable
iPhone/iPod speaker device is a great gift for the Apple-phile!
5.
Pearls.
Almost every career woman can use a strand of pearls
and some pearl earrings. A pair of inexpensive, daily wear pearls
can be just the thing. (Purchase an extra set of faux
pearls for extracurricular activities.)
6.
Handbags.
Best to stick with her designer of choice, but for great prices
and no need to visit the store, try shopping around online. My favorite
handbag designer these days is Lazaro.
7.
Shoes.
Sex and the City was eye candy for the shoe lover. You’ll
know if your special love qualifies by the shoes she already wears
and whether or not she drools when you leave the Giuseppe Zanotti
page open on Overstock.com.
Top
Gifts $1000 Range
1.
3-day investing retreat in Santa Monica, California with Natalie
Pace. Last year, stocks were the top choice for women. This year,
it’s getting a plan that works. My Get Rich and Enrich Retreat
is a great way to spend three days at the beach in Santa Monica,
California getting the budgeting and investing blueprint you need
to get rich in the Bailout era. Just a dozen people in a boardroom
setting. Better yet, reserve a seat for you and your spouse. You’ll
love playing the Billionaire Game on the sand at sunset. Only a
handful of seats remain for the March 27-29, 2009 Get Rich Retreat,
so call 866.476.7442 or email Info@NataliePace.com
to get more information now. Register before December 15, 2009 and
receive the early bird price of $999/person (when two people register)
or $1299/person, if coming solo.
2.
Parker
Palm Springs is offering a girls getaway for just $99/per
person, with a four-girl minimum. If your special woman is in
need of a getaway, the package includes a private yoga lesson, picnic
and muddled lemonade (spiked Parker PS style).
3. Christmas
in the Big Apple! The Parker Meridien is offering the lowest rates
of the year — just $199/night from December 20, 2009 through December
25, 2009. Upgrade to a room with one of the best views of Central
Park in the City. And enjoy NYC’s finest burgers in the burger joint
and orgasmic breakfast at Norma’s. The Starlight Ballroom offers
one of the most stunning views to get married in, in the world!
Surveys on my
website indicate that most of us are spending less this holiday
season. The good news about this year, however, is that most stores
are discounting their goods significantly to attract your dollars
– meaning, you might be able to spend a lot less and get much more
than you bargained for!
This holiday
season, I plan to...
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Answer
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Percentage
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Spend
more! I'm doing my part to stimulate the economy.
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8
%
8 %
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|
Spend
less. Trying to survive!
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52
%
52 %
|
|
Spend
the same as last year.
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34
%
34 %
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|
Spend
nothing. I'm broke!
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4
%
4 %
|
Total Votes
= 23
Luxurious,
Scented Sugar Scrub
Ingredients
8 oz. avocado
oil
8 oz. sweet almond oil
4 oz. jojoba oil
4 oz. Vitamin E oil
½ tsp. grapefruit seed extract
5 drops concentrated rose oil (or your favorite scent)
4 – 24 oz. packages of turbinado sugar (for the scrub)
Directions:
Mix oils
together. Add 5 drops of scent and grapefruit seed extract.
Alternate
pouring sugar and oil, sugar and oil into the plastic gift container,
until 85% full. (You want enough oil to cover the sugar, but not
to have free-floating oil on top.)
Decorate the
container, and include the recipe (if you desire) when you give
the scrub away as a gift (so your friends know that the oils are
most luxurious than the standard salon brand). higher quality than
the standard cheap oils used in the salon and over-the-counter brands).
WHERE
TO BUY THE OILS and CONTAINERS:
Trader
Joe’s has great prices on Vitamin E and jojoba oils. If you purchase
the other oils through a grocery store (like a Coop or a natural
food store), you’ll likely pay less than if you go to a designer
potions and lotions shop. Also, I raid the local dollar store for
plastic containers, and use my color printer to print out the labels!
OTHER
TIPS:
This
recipe uses only the finest oils. The sugar exfoliates the skin,
while the oils replenish and soften. 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 prefer sugar to salt, since so many of us wax or shave.
This does leave a slippery residue in the shower, so take care to
wipe down the tub after using!
MASSAGE
OIL for Guys:
Use
the same recipe above. Substitute a more manly scent instead of
the rose essence. I’ve found that lavender, rosemary and even melon-cucumber
can work, but you know your beloved boy best! Pick a scent that
will be appealing to him, and make sure that you’ve got an evening
set aside to show him how it works! (And if you picked up the faux
pearls – just $5 on Amazon -- include them in the fun package.)
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Real
Estate: Welcome To The Underworld.
by Steve
Dietrich.
Time
to Fix Your Loan!
Millions
of American families have entered the world of Jules Verne, living
in homes that are deep underwater. Data from Zillow indicates that
about 25% of homes were underwater earlier this summer and prices
have continued to decline. For many homeowners the decline in home
values, coupled with the economic conditions, has significantly
reduced their net worth and seriously affected their cash flow.
It’s time to
stop the whimpering and denial and go to work on a program for the
New Year.
Step 1: A
Look Ahead – One of the difficulties in assessing the future
market for single family residential properties is accounting for
the impact of the Federal first time homebuyer program as it has
existed, and how it will perform after the recently approved extension
and modifications. In addition, tens of thousands of homeowners
have been plucked from foreclosure with loan restructuring. However,
the data indicates that a high percentage of these homeowners will
re-default in the near term.
First American
Core Logic, one of the more respected information sources, predicts
that home prices will continue to decline through the first quarter
of 2010. We believe that their data and methodology will prove to
be more accurate than some of the more popular indices mentioned
in the press. The good news is that they believe there is light
at the end of the tunnel, beginning mid-2010.
Contrary to
press reports, research has shown that homeowners have not
been dumping underwater homes for economic reasons. Rather, several
studies conclude that most foreclosures result from an inability
to make the payments rather than an economic decision to abandon
a home where the mortgage exceeds the market value. In short, a
majority of the homeowners who owe more than their homes are worth
are not abandoning them, yet.
We believe that
there are several important considerations, which follow from this
analysis. The first is that a number of families may be using credit
card debt to bridge the shortfall between income and mortgage payments.
If this is correct, these families are likely to reach the point
where they have exhausted their credit limits and the mortgage problem
may have morphed into a bankruptcy problem.
The second issue
is that those whose homes are underwater, but on which they are
making current loan payments, are likely to be very conservative
spenders and may take in boarders. The end result is to dampen the
recovery in both consumer demand and residential real estate. As
a recent article by the staff of the Federal Reserve Bank of San
Francisco notes, inflation adjusted household debt grew much faster
than disposable income for a number of years, accelerating in the
early 2000’s. Much of the new debt was mortgage related. Deleveraging
can come through increased savings or relief from debt, which has
significant impacts on businesses or the Federal Debt. There’s no
easy answer.
Another issue
affecting an increasing number of Americans is a long simmering
loss of confidence in the motives of those in Washington and their
ability and willingness to referee a free market economy. The disdain
and anger is spread across political identities and geography. It
raises the question, "Could 5 million families simply go on
strike and file bankruptcy as a way of sending a message that taxpayers
and small business owners need a bailout more than the fool-hardy
banks and billionaire bankers?"
Today you have
to take the news and de-spin it into reality. Recently headlines
bragged that foreclosures were down 3% from the prior month, totaling
about 330,000. Three percent of 330,000 is about 10,000. In the
background the Feds were pushing more loans through restructuring,
promising to expand and extend the homebuyer tax credits and encouraging
banks to allow more breathing room. It appears reasonable to believe
that without these external forces the number of foreclosures would
have increased, not decreased.
The recent Chinese
demands that America raise interest rates escaped the intellectual
grasp of most of the editors in the U.S. The Chinese continued,
complaining that America’s low interest rates were encouraging an
international bubble. Why is this of concern to China? For two reasons:
First, the buying power of their vast holdings in dollars is falling
with negative interest rates when adjusted for inflation and exchange
rates.
The second and
larger issue is that China is engaged in a worldwide campaign to
buy sources of raw materials in order to provide an assured supply
in the future. Low American interest rates are inflating prices,
just as the excesses in both the government agencies and private
sector inflated the housing bubble.
It is likely
that the era of low interest rates will end in 2010. If history
repeats itself, the shift will be sudden. We believe that in a year
or two we will look back on 2009 as a time of incredibly cheap money.
One of the most
under-reported stories of the current economic downturn is its impact
on many single, professional mothers. Many have gone from six digit
incomes to hiding from the nightly barrage of creditor calls. Their
jobs have been downsized, outsourced or simply eliminated. Gone
too are the company benefits. The 2009 job options are limited and
many are finding two jobs are essential to survival. For too many,
survival may mean bankruptcy.
Step 2: Damage
Control – The net result of constrained consumer purchases and
limited demand for residential real estate is likely to be a very
sluggish recovery, especially in areas like Southern California.
During the downturn,
homeowners have been subjected to extensive social pressure to "man
up" to their obligations to pay their loans and threatened
with draconian damage to their credit should they default on their
loans or suffer a foreclosure. If you listen carefully, these are
the same execs of the bailed out companies, who hand out tens of
billions of bonuses to the wizards who created this mess, and of
course the same VIPs who see corporate bankruptcy as a planning
and restructuring tool. In other words, they are intimidating you
not to employ a strategy that they would be using,
if they were in your shoes.
A short sale
may appear be a win-win situation. However, borrowers must
have counsel from the inception of the process. The counsel should
be very experienced in the areas of concern (foreclosure, bankruptcy,
short sale etc). Clients can help their professionals by being organized,
focused and prepared. Step 2 is to listen very carefully, and Step
3 is to follow-up on any requests for information or decisions.
A number of
lenders are requiring the borrowers to execute debt instruments
for any shortfall between the loan balance and the net proceeds
from the short sale. The borrower is not relieved of the obligation
and will thus have both the short sale and the remaining debt obligation
on their credit.
Any short sale
agreement should include language specifying that as part of the
transaction, the lender(s) will relieve the homeowner of any further
obligation on the debt. Otherwise, you can look forward to the bank
selling your shortfall to a collection agency, which will hound
you to pay it off. Not really a short sale at all, when you think
about it. Could even be MORE money when you factor in the interest
and penalties the collector will charge you.
Unfortunately
for California borrowers, a new state law to protect borrowers from
unscrupulous loan modification schemes was hijacked by the lending
industry and modified to make it very difficult for borrowers to
obtain advice and assistance on issues relating to their financial
problems without hiring an attorney or counselor approved by the
State.
Foreclosure
laws vary by state, but bankruptcies are governed by Federal law.
For those with problems, the Nolo Press website and books on foreclosure
and bankruptcy are highly recommended. However, as government programs
change, some of the blog comments may be out of date.
Our advice for
those experiencing severe financial stress is to explore all of
the alternatives, including putting the unthinkable on the table
for consideration. Before seriously considering this you need
to have both a good book and competent counsel. Doing some homework
first will save attorney fees and take the mystery out of the process.
For the vast
majority of Americans the times are difficult, but not terminal.
The first rule is do no further harm. Avoid the false promises of
an easy cure. Get creative. And know that with wise counsel and
smart moves in the right direction, this too shall pass.
Join Steve
Dietrich on the Modern Girls’ Guide to Sex, Love and Money Show
December 16, 2009. Before you throw in the towel on your mortgage,
chat through some alternatives with Steve Dietrich and Natalie Pace.
Go to BlogTalkRadio.com/NataliePace
for call-in information. Log-on to chat your Questions during the
show.
About
Steve Dietrich
Steve
Dietrich
is the President of Financial
Research Group. Since its formation in 1970, Financial
Research Group (FRG) has provided sophisticated real estate development
and consulting services to its institutional, corporate and real
estate clients. Steve is a former guest lecturer at the Anderson
Graduate School of Business at UCLA. He graduated from UCLA, and
received his MBA from Harvard University.
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Gold Will Hit $5,000
an Ounce, According to 20-year Veteran Gold CEO Rob McEwen.
by Natalie
Pace.
Learn
10 Ways to Build Your Personal Fort Knox.
On November
11, 2009, U.S. Gold Chairman and CEO Rob McEWen joined me on BlogTalkRadio
to discuss his predictions that gold will hit $5000/ounce before
the current run-up is over. After I picked myself off of the floor,
I managed to squeeze in a few important questions on when that run-up
will occur, what signs we will see beforehand and how McEwen’s company,
U.S. Gold, plans to capitalize upon that prediction. With promising
discoveries in Mexico (silver) and Nevada (gold), is U.S. Gold ready
to start mining? To be bought out? To close down for the winter?
Listen to my
complete 45-minute, exclusive
Q&A with U.S. Gold Chairman and CEO Rob McEwen on BlogTalkRadio/NataliePace.
And read McEWen’s Tips below for striking your own personal gold
mine by investing in this precious metal.
11
Ways to Build Your Own Fort Knox
1.
Know your buy-ins and pullbacks, Gold is trading in the $1100/ounce
range, up over 40% this year and over four times as high as the
$250/ounce price of 2002. So, is it too late to invest in gold or
gold mining companies? Not according to Rob McEwen. Mr. McEwen believes
that gold will hit $2000 before the end of 2010 and $5000 before
the current run-up in price is over. Stagger your price points to
ensure that you capture the lowest price of this year and next.
And, of course, if Mr. McEwen is wrong, it won’t be the first time
that a Wall Street prediction went awry. Never bet the farm on any
one asset.
2. Watch
what the central banks do. Large
purchases or sales establish the price of gold. The Bank of England
sold the last of its gold at $250/ounce in 2002, anchoring this
as the price point for most of that year. India purchased
200 tons of gold in November of this year, pushing gold to
its current record high. Will China, Asia, Russia, Saudi Arabia
and Middle Eastern Sovereign funds follow India’s lead into gold,
reinforcing the view that the economies of Europe and the U.S. have
"collapsed" and gold is money?
3. Gold
is money. In
the past, gold prices were seasonal – linked to jewelry trends,
i.e. strong in the first of the year (Valentine’s Day) and the last
quarter (Christmas), with a lull over the summer. In this decade,
however, prices have been more directly linked with Central Bank
buying and selling than seasonal consumer trends.
According
to Rob McEwen, "Gold is money! Governments are trying to solve
issues by printing money, but our dollars will buy less at the end
of the day. We have to protect our own currency because governments
around the world are not prepared to do that."
4. Stability
Counts. Rob
McEwen notes that when purchasing U.S. Gold, he wanted to explore
in a country where his company wouldn’t be taken away with a "machine
gun stuck in his chest." Which countries are most vulnerable
to corruption and violence? McEwen avoids Africa and parts of the
former Soviet Union. You can see which countries your gold mining
company mines in online. You can also check out property rights,
business friendliness and more in the 2009
Index of Economic Freedom (a publication of the
Heritage Foundation).
5. Know
the cycle of the mining company. When
a company makes a discovery, the share price explodes. As a company
goes through the lengthy process of putting the discovery into production
– raising additional capital, filing permits, etc., according to
McEwen, there tends to be a three-year delay of game for shareholders
in the U.S. and about two years in Mexico. If everything turns up
on time and on budget, share price can start appreciating again.
If not, the price can lag even further.
6. U.S. Gold’s
life cycle? With
recent discoveries of silver in Mexico and gold in Nevada, McEwen
predicts that viability studies will start becoming news for U.S.
Gold in the first quarter of 2010. He also warns that it took 17
years to build up Goldcorp, the corporation he took from $50 million
market cap to $8 billion. Although U.S. Gold is currently not for
sale, McEwen did affirm that he would consider any viable offer
that crosses his desk.
7. U.S.
gold is an exploration company, i.e. not mining or selling gold
to the Central Banks (yet). So why should investors have interest
in the company? According
to Rob McEwen, "U.S. Gold is well located and has a large land
package in Nevada next to a large discovery. We have found gold
similar to that discovery. We have a big silver discovery in Mexico
that has been growing in size and looks to have considerable room
to grow from here. We have plenty of cash, $50 million, and no debt.
I own 21% of the company. I don’t take a salary. The way I make
money is the same way my shareholders make money – though a higher
share price."
8. CEO Rob
McEwen tapped new reserves with Goldcorp, and even founded the "Goldcorp
Principle," an open source method of locating new reserves.
So, if anyone can take an exploration company through to a nice
payday for shareholders, he’s the man… Rob
McEwen: "I happen to like the exploration area because when
you do make a discovery, you can have very big runs in your share
price. But it comes with a risk. Goldcorp was based on a fabulous
discovery."
9. What are
the signs of a bubble in gold? Some
of the markers for a "bubble" are 1) If you see a rush
of new issues coming in any industry; 2) There are all sorts of
people excited about the sector, and; 3) investment bankers are
all over the deal. "Within a short period of that, they will
have satisfied the market and that is when we are getting close
to an interim top," according to McEwen. Hmmm. Anyone remember
the New Economy of 2000 and real estate 2005?
So,
are investment bankers knocking on McEwen’s door these days? McEwen:
"They haven’t. You’re just starting to see some issues. Back
in 2007, any company with gold in their name could raise money."
10. Bubbles
can move higher very quickly. Gold
went from $40 an ounce to $850 ounce between 1970 and 1980. Half
of that move occurred in four months time, between Sept. 1979 and
January of 1980. So, don’t be in a rush to jump out before the fever
really starts.
Listen to my
complete, exclusive
Q&A with U.S. Gold Chairman and CEO Rob McEwen on BlogTalkRadio/NataliePace
for additional information.
About
Rob McEwen:
Rob
McEwen is Chairman and CEO of US
Gold. Previously, McEwen was the founder and former
Chairman and CEO of Goldcorp Inc. Goldcorp’s Red Lake Mine in northwestern
Ontario, Canada is still considered to be the richest gold mine
in the world. During his tenure at Goldcorp, McEwen transformed
the company from a collection of small companies into a mining powerhouse,
growing its market capitalization from US $50 million to approximately
$8 billion. More importantly, the shares of the company produced
a compounded annual growth rate of 32%.
Full Disclosure:
Natalie Pace owns positions in U.S. Gold and Rob McEwen owns 21%
of the company.
About
Natalie Pace:
Natalie Pace, is the author of You
Vs. Wall Street
and host of the Modern Girl’s Guide to Sex, Love and Money
radio show on BlogTalkRadio.com/NataliePace!
Follow her on Twitter.com/NataliePace,
YouTube.com/NataliePaceDOTCOM
and Facebook.com/NatalieWynnePace.
For more information please visit, http://www.nataliepace.com.
Please note:
NataliePace.com does not act or operate like a broker. We report
on financial news, and are one of the most trusted independently
owned and operated financial news corporations in the U.S. 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 consult an experienced, reputable financial
professional before buying or selling any security, and consider
your long-term goals and strategies.
Investors
should NOT all in on any asset class, including gold. Your retirement
plan should reflect a long, safe strategy, which has been designed
with the assistance of a financial professional who is familiar
with your goals, risk tolerance, tax needs and more. The "trading"
portion of your portfolio should be a very small part of your investment
strategy, and the amount of money you invest into individual companies
should never be greater than your experience, wisdom, knowledge
and patience.
IMPORTANT
DISCLAIMER: Information has been obtained from sources believed
to be reliable however NataliePace.com 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.
.
|
|

AOL.
From Bomb of the New Economy to Deal of the Decade.
by Natalie
Pace.
Includes
a New
Media Stock Report Card.
On December
9, 2009, AOL will spin off from Time-Warner. This is quite a third
act for the company, after the colossal mess that Gerald Levine
and Stephen Case created when AOL decided to swallow up Time-Warner
in an over-valued deal, worth $164 billion (at the time, on paper).
By 2002, the combined company was forced to write off $99 billion
of its value, and today, AOL would be lucky to get anyone to bid
$3 billion for it. Needless to say, though original AOL investors
won’t be laughing anytime in the near future, historians and prosperity
will forever view the original deal as the LOL of the New Economy.
So, why do I
think that the newly independent AOL is the deal of the decade?
The AOL Media Network is now attracting more unique viewers than
YouTube.com, ranked at #6 in the most trafficked web site in the
United States above YouTube (at #7). With both video-rich media
companies in the top 10 most popular U.S. sites, it’s easy to see
that Case and Levine were right on the money that television and
movies would migrate online. They were just too early – and pie-eyed
with their pricing.
| Top
10 Web Brands ranked by Unique Audience for October 2009 |
| Brand |
Unique
Audience (000) |
| Google |
147,861
|
| Yahoo! |
133,537
|
| MSN/WindowsLive/Bing |
112,340
|
| Facebook |
107,482
|
| Microsoft |
93,824
|
| AOL
Media Network |
91,205
|
| YouTube |
90,396
|
| Fox
Interactive Media |
61,987
|
| Wikipedia |
61,881
|
| Apple |
59,580
|
|
|
|
The real question
going forward is, "Can #7 most-trafficked site AOL beef up advertising
revenue before they lose all of their subscribers (leftovers from
their dial-up service)?" Below are a few reasons why I think AOL
is poised to do just that.
- Ad
Revenue: AOL just hired away Tim Armstrong from Google
as Chairman and CEO of the new AOL. According to Time-Warner Chairman
and CEO Jeff Bewkes, "Tim is the right executive to move AOL into
the next phase of its evolution. At Google, Armstrong helped build
one of the most successful media teams in the history of the Internet
-- helping to make Google the most popular online search advertising
platform in the world for direct and brand marketers. He's an
advertising pioneer with a stellar reputation and proven track
record." Tim knows how to monetize online.
- Ad
Revenue: Online advertising has proven very resilient
in the deflationary depression we are currently experiencing.
While U.S. ad revenue was down 15.4% in the first half of 2009,
online advertising revenue was only down 1% (source: The Nielsen
Company). And third quarter revenue reports show Internet advertising
revenue inched up 1.7%, to $5.5 billion for the 3rd
quarter.
Year-to-Year
Change in Ad Spend, by Media
|
Media
Category
|
First
Half 2009 vs.
First Half 2008 Change
|
|
Cable
TV
|
1.5%
|
|
Spanish
Language Cable TV
|
0.6%
|
|
Internet
|
-1.0%
|
|
FSI
Coupon
|
-5.5%
|
|
Network
TV
|
-7.0%
|
|
Network
Radio
|
-9.0%
|
|
Spot
Radio
|
-9.1%
|
|
Spanish
Language TV
|
-10.1%
|
|
Syndication
TV
|
-11.6%
|
|
Local
Newspaper
|
-13.2%
|
|
Outdoor
|
-14.9%
|
|
Spot
TV 101-210 DMAs
|
-17.4%
|
|
National
Magazine
|
-21.2%
|
|
National
Sunday Supplement
|
-22.4%
|
|
National
Newspaper
|
-22.8%
|
|
Local
Magazine
|
-25.4%
|
|
B-to-B
Magazines
|
-31.8%
|
| Spot
TV Top 100 DMAs |
-32.1%
|
|
Local
Sunday Supplements
|
-45.7%
|
|
Grand
Total
|
-15.4%
|
|
Source:
The Nielsen Company
**
Internet advertising expenditures account for CPM-based,
image-based advertising. These reported estimated expenditures
do not account for paid search advertising, text only,
paid fee services, performance-based campaigns, sponsorships,
barters, in-stream ("pre-rolls") players, messenger applications,
partnership advertising, promotions and email campaigns,
compound image/text ad or house advertising activity.
|
- Ad
Revenue: Preliminary estimates put the market value of
AOL (post spin-off) at $2.5 billion market cap (approximately),
based upon Time-Warner shareholders receiving one share of AOL
for every 11 shares of Time-Warner owned (as of December 9, 2009).
110 million shares at $23/share (the current price of AOL) = $2.53
billion. Considering that AOL generated $2.448 billion in revenue
in the first three quarters of 2009, this makes AOL desirable
as a takeover target for any mega=corporation looking for cash
flow.
- Ad
Revenue: Internet advertising revenues totaled $23.4 billion
in 2008 (Source: IAB). AOL’s new position online, in the top 10
most trafficked sites, means they can eat a little more of that
pie, especially with the help of their partner, Google.
- The
Google Glow: AOL is in an excellent position, partly due
to its partnership with Google, to ring up more search and advertising
revenue. The Google partnership dropped $422 million into
AOL’s top line in the first three quarters of 2009. Under Armstrong’s
leadership, this has a potential to be maximized even further,
since Armstrong ran Google’s American Operations, during a period
(from 2000-2009) when Google ad revenue grew from zero to $22.7
billion. Additionally, since Google’s exclusive search contract
with AOL ends on December 19, 2010, high profile wooing from other
top search engines could commence almost immediately.
- Holdings:
In addition to AOL, the company holdings include Mapquest and
Moviefone, making AOL an attractive takeover target.The combined
AOL Media Companies attract more eyes than YouTube, Fox Interactive
Media (which includes Hulu and MySpace), Wikipedia and Apple.
- Board:
Tim Armstrong is not exaggerating when he brags that the newly
formed AOL board will be "on a mission to help create the
future of media and content." Board members include: James
A. Wiatt, former chairman and CEO of the William Morris Agency
(1999-2009); Michael K. Powell, former Chairman of the FCC (and
son of Colin Powell); Richard L. Dalzell, the former SVP and Chief
Information Officer of Amazon; Patricia E. Mitchell, the former
President and Chief Executive Officer of The Paley Center for
Media and President and CEO of the Public Broadcasting Service
from 2000 to 2006.
Time-Warner
is hurting as a corporation -- on many fronts, from losses in its
pension portfolio, to losses in advertising revenue. However, despite
the colossal challenges of losing almost 80% of its girth (and all
of the shareholder lawsuits and Carl Icahn temper tantrums that
accompany that), one thing that remains strong and desirable is
Time-Warner content. From People, Time, Sports Illustrated and
Fortune magazines to HBO in television, and film hits like the
Harry Potter series and The Hangover, Time-Warner
seems to have a corner on what people most want to see, experience,
read and watch. As a separate entity that is close to Time-Warner
(with lots of mutual shareholders and ownership), AOL is in a fantastic
position to become a content leader on the web, much like Hulu has
maximized its relationship with Fox and NBC. AOL is in a fantastic
position to continue to rule the web.
Trading for
AOL is going on now on a "when issued" basis, in advance
of the December 9, 2009 official day of AOL Independence. The price
has already dropped 15%, from $27 to $23. This came in the wake
of an announcement that AOL will take a $200 million restructuring
hit and lay off approximately 1/3 of its staff in the near future.
Additional concerns include analyst warnings that earnings at AOL
will continue to shrink in 2010, and potentially as far into the
future as 2014. However, by my calculations, the two things that
many analysts are undervaluing are the monetization capabilities
of the board and CEO, and the resilience of the Internet advertising
space, compared to traditional media. It doesn’t take a genius to
see how attractive Moviefone and AOL have become, or how utilitarian
Mapquest (the #2 map site, behind Google maps) is.
While distress
in the markets could adversely impact the share price in the short
term, headlines going forward might well be the just how beautiful
AOL looks – inside and out -- after its makeover under the magical
touch of Tim Armstrong. AOL is starting to embrace all of the trademarks
of Google: easy to use, best in its class, ads you want to click
on and even a little heart. (AOL even has GNN – the Good News Network.)
Check out
the New
Media Stock Report Card for a line-up of the numbers of
AOL, Google, Yahoo, Microsoft and Time-Warner. I added AOL to the
Hot News list today. At the same time, I added Microsoft and Yahoo
to the Cooling Off list. Read the comments for additional information.
Full Disclosure:
I don’t own any positions in the companies mentioned in this article.
About
Natalie Pace:
Natalie Pace, is the author of You
Vs. Wall Street
and CEO of one of the most respected, independently owned financial
news corporations in the U.S. She has been ranked as a #1 stock
picker from TipsTraders.com and has partnered content with
Forbes.com,
Sohu.com, Kiplinger’s Personal Finance and more. She
has appeared on Fox News, Good Morning America, CNBC,
Time Magazine, More Magazine, USA Today, NPR and national radio
shows. Ask her your money questions on her weekly radio show on
BlogTalkRadio.com/NataliePace!
Follow her on Twitter.com/NataliePace,
YouTube.com/NataliePaceDOTCOM
and Facebook.com/NatalieWynnePace.
For more information please visit, http://www.nataliepace.com.
Please note:
NataliePace.com does not act or operate like a broker. We report
on financial news, and are one of the most trusted independently
owned and operated financial news corporations in the U.S. 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 consult an experienced, reputable financial
professional before buying or selling any security, and consider
your long-term goals and strategies.
Investors
should NOT be using the Hot News on Cool Stocks list or the Cooling
Off list to trade their nest eggs. Your retirement plan should reflect
a long, safe strategy, which has been designed with the assistance
of a financial professional who is familiar with your goals, risk
tolerance, tax needs and more. The "trading" portion of your portfolio
should be a very small part of your investment strategy, and the
amount of money you invest into individual companies should never
be greater than your experience, wisdom, knowledge and patience.
IMPORTANT
DISCLAIMER: Information has been obtained from sources believed
to be reliable however NataliePace.com 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.
|
|
Enthusiasm...
by Gary
Kobat.
"...nothing
great has ever been achieved without enthusiasm."
-Ralph Waldo Emerson
 |
| Actor Will
Ferrell and Gary Kobat. |
...suddenly
one day we realize what our purpose is: we have vision, a goal,
and from then on work toward implementing that goal...body composition,
career, home, relationship:
something we
enjoy being involved in already but on a smaller scale....this is
where another layer of "awakened doing" arises: enthusiasm.
...enthusiasm
means there is deep enjoyment in what we do, plus the added element
of a goal, or vision that we work toward. When we add a goal to
the enjoyment of what we do, the energy-field or frequency changes...a
certain degree of structural tension is now added to enjoyment,
and so it turns into enthusiasm. At the height of this creative
activity, there will be enormous intensity, energy, and results
behind what we do, laser-like, like an arrow that is moving toward
a target.
...to an onlooker,
it may appear that we are under stress but the intensity of enthusiasm
has nothing to do with stress...unlike stress: enthusiasm has a
high frequency and so resonates with the creative power of the universe
....the word
enthusiasm comes from ancient Greek - en and theos, meaning god-like
or "possessed by a god"
....with enthusiasm
we will find we don’t have to do it all ourselves, in fact there
is nothing of significance that we can do "all" by ourselves...
...enthusiasm
always knows where it is going, but at the same time it is deeply
at one with the present moment, the now, which is the source of
its aliveness....
...remember:
we cannot manifest what we want, we can only manifest what
we already have .
…what target
are you aimed at? do you have a big enough reason why you will achieve
it?
train smart.
live, race. recover smarter.
About
Gary Kobat:
Gary is the tough-love Coach, no-nonsense Trainer, and
World-Class Athlete whose energy for life has inspired, educated,
and empowered lasting personal and professional change for thousands. He
believes that we can re-invent ourselves by living life
without-limits; understanding that the universe is
full of infinite possibilities; that everything we need is inside:
right here & right now; and by never, ever, ever giving-up.
Gary's client
list includes the who's who in film, business, and sport. For the
past decade he has quietly mentored the spirituality, health, and
longevity of Jim Carrey, Will Ferrell, Mariska Hargitay, and
countless others.
You can sign
up for a free copy of Gary’s e-book at GaryKobat.com.
Follow him on Facebook
and Twitter
for daily tweets of inspiration.
|
|
Don’t
Invest in Things You Hate.
by
Natalie Pace.
3
Ways to Avoid the Next Wall Street Disaster.
 |
| Photo Credit:
Doug Mazell. Mazell.com. © 2008. |
Tis
the season to be jolly, and honestly that should be the attitude
you take toward investing all year long. Why? Peter Lynch would
say, "If you like the store, chances are you’ll love the stock."
When you like something – a product, store, service, etc. -- a thousand
things have gone right from the executive suite to the manufacturing
plant to get the product on the shelf at a price you want to pay.
Conversely, when you start loathing a product, a company or a service,
those policies and deficiencies that you are despising are not just
random. They are red flags of deep-rooted problems – a real corporate
dis-ease/disease.
As
a shopper, you have the "proof in the pudding." If it
tastes rotten, it probably is. General Motors missed leading the
charge for fuel efficiency because the management’s focus was trying
to meet a $100 billion dollar debt obligation – instead of dreaming
up the next Motor Trend Car of the Year (which the Prius
won in 2004). Enron was gouging energy prices -- that resulted in
some actual deaths in California, on purpose -- while Enron
energy traders actually joked about the results of their nefarious
deeds. On the other hand, the vast majority of Wall Street corporations
make great products, file honest earnings reports, care about their
employees and their customers and even try to give back to their
communities.
Below
are three easy ways you can stop being a sucker and start winning
on Wall Street.
-
The
Store Experience Sucks. When
the earnings reports show increased earnings but the store is
empty all of the time, you don’t have to read the full report
to know it’s a lie. There is wisdom in the shopper, and as a
shopper, you are getting the news months before it lands on
the analyst’s desk in the form of an earnings report. If you
align the shopping list with the investing list, you’ll get
rich and enrich the world at the same time. You’ll always be
invested in the leading companies on Wall Street, instead of
having blind faith in (and being buried by) the Bailout Index.
(Over 10% of the 30 companies in the leading Blue Chip Index
were bailed out in 2008 and 2009.)
-
Hate
Being the Sucker? If
you can’t get to the shopping cart without the dial-up connection
crashing (as happened for most Americans in 2000) and the Internet
companies have been losing money for five years, NASDAQ is going
to crash. When no one can afford to buy a home without fancy
loan tricks, you’ve got prices that are unsustainable. When
college students can borrow money to buy and flip homes in Florida,
Arizona, Nevada and California with a few lies on the application,
housing is at the brink of the cliff. When a hedge fund manager
promises 12% gains each year, but refusing to provide details
on where the returns are coming from and is late issuing the
check, you’ve got a Madoff shyster on your hands. When the
Sales Pitch Sounds Too Good To Be True, it probably is.
What
unstable asset are you being suckered into buying today? Even
bonds must be examined with a forensic eye, in a world where Chrysler
and GM are bankrupt and municipalities are teetering on the cliff.
And while "the stock market" has gained on the year,
there is a significant difference between the returns of the younger
companies that are concentrated in the NASDAQ 100 and the 30 components
of the Dow Jones Industrial Average (many of which were bailed
out and still vulnerable). NASDAQ rocketed to 35% gains in 2009
(as of November 16, 2009), while the Dow muscled back to earn
15% this year (while still down 20% from the beginning of 2008).
-
Hate
Losing Half of Your Nest Egg? Buy
and Hold Doesn’t Work in a slow growth economy. You are
poorer today than you were ten years ago, if you were employing
the investment strategy so touted by the "gurus" (but
not by the Nobel Prize winning economists). Buy and hold is
not an investing strategy that the top money managers and top
gainers on Wall Street are using. And if you haven’t heard the
term "Modern Portfolio Theory" come out of your broker’s
mouth, you’re staring right into the face of the problem of
your investment strategy. It’s time to start resurrecting your
nest egg, utilizing Modern Portfolio Theory, fund diversification
(including four hot industries), annual rebalancing and common
sense.
This may sound complicated, but it’s easy as a pie chart.
Using this
three-part pie chart strategy, you would have captured 80 percent
gains in
NASDAQ at the beginning of 2000, and had limited exposure (less
than 10% of your nest egg) to the 70 percent NASDAQ losses that
occurred between 2000 and 2002. Real estate doubled between
2002 and 2007, and clean energy earned 60 cents on the dollar
in 2007. That means every $100,000 becomes $180,000 during a
NASDAQ boom period (such as between 1999 and 2000), or becomes
$200,000 during a real estate rocket ship, or becomes $160,000
while invested in clean energy -- and most of these gains occurred
in a single year! There are big gains to be made in this brave,
new world.
Just
as you can’t heal high blood pressure with the same old doughnuts,
coffee and couch-potato plan, you are not going to get a better
bottom line by sitting around, doing nothing and praying that things
get better. You are the architect of your life, and it’s time to
get smart.
Start
with reading You
Vs. Wall Street: Grow What You’ve Got and Win
Back What You’ve Lost. If you want to create a plan immediately
that will work for the rest of your life, register for my March
27, 2010 Get Rich and Enrich Retreats. Call 866.476.7442 or email
info@NataliePace.com for details.
When
Wall Street acts like the town drunk, they are driving your car
with your gas. Main Street owns Wall Street. You own these companies
in your investment plan (in those "funds and equities"
in your 401K) and you own them now as a taxpayer (at least the ones
that have been bailed out). So, if you want to send Wall Street
to rehab, it's time to lay down a new set of rules of how the Street
behaves with your hard-earned dollars. Curfew your
investments in the status quo. Don’t invest in things you hate.
Blind faith in Wall Street was as silly as giving the car keys to
your teenager on prom night.
So
have a little faith (not blind faith) that you can do this, if you
just get the right tools and education.
You
Vs. Wall Street teaches you how to win on Wall Street
in any market -- bull or bear. Now is the time to choose wisdom
over blind faith, to invest in winning companies and to whistle
all the way to your local bailed out bank.
About
You
Vs. Wall Street
You
Vs. Wall Street
is a "must-read financial bible," and "just what
some readers need to find themselves exponentially richer in the
coming years," according to readers. Success Magazine writes:
"Provides almost fool proof methods for growing wealth over
the long haul." Dr. Gary Becker believes that "Many people,
including educated men and women get into trouble when they neglect
to follow simple and fundamental rules of the type provided in this
book. This is why I recommend it with enthusiasm." Dr. Becker
won the 1992 Nobel prize in economics, the Presidential Medal of
Freedom in 2007 and is on staff at the University of Chicago.
About
Natalie Pace:
Natalie Pace, is the author of You
Vs. Wall Street
and host of the Modern Girl’s Guide to Sex, Love and Money
radio show on BlogTalkRadio.com/NataliePace!
Follow her on Twitter.com/NataliePace,
YouTube.com/NataliePaceDOTCOM
and Facebook.com/NatalieWynnePace.
For more information please visit, http://www.nataliepace.com.
|
|
Ban
Your Bra (at least part of the time).
by Dr.
Anna Walden, ND, DNM, MH, CNHP, HealthWalk Vital Hematology.
Is
Your Underwear Making You Sick?
A
woman’s face and form is cherished not only by herself, but by society
in general. Humans have followed fashion though the ages to enhance
or downright alter physical appearance in order to achieve a particular
type of beauty. We have crammed square toes into pointed shoes with
high heels, and cinched waists and torsos into impossibly small
sizes and shapes. And this particular invention, the corset has
caused many women misery over centuries by exerting unnatural pressure
on the soft organs, the circulatory system, and the ability to breathe.
It is no wonder that women fainted so often "back in the day."
Although the
corset was eventually rebelled against and forsaken; its near relative,
the brassiere, has not loosened its grip in more ways than one.
Any time there are constrictors of any kind on our bodies, the circulatory
and lymphatic system are affected. The nutrients are brought to
the tissue by vessels, which range in size from obvious to microscopic.
Our blood is carrying nutrients to our cells and also carrying back
waste products. Bathing the cells is the lymph fluid, which also
contains cellular waste as well as nutrients, proteins, hormones,
fats and sugars.
It is imperative
that the lymph fluid is free flowing and not be allowed to stagnate.
Otherwise the cells would be living in their own waste products
unable to receive the necessary oxygen and nutrients. This fluid
has been delivered through the capillary walls and can also return
the same way. But not all of it. There is a significant portion,
which wends its way back into the bloodstream by another path. And
that path is the lymphatics. There are a series of valves that keep
the lymph moving away from the point of origin; the blood in the
veins have the heart to propel it on its way.
Lymph fluid
has only passive help in its journey. The main mechanism to circulate
the lymph fluid is from movement of the muscles. Lymph circulation
also gets assistance from inhalation and from any kind of physical
motion. This delicate system is what keeps us from swelling up.
So any time there is pressure on the surface of the body, these
systems are compromised. The research of David Moth demonstrated
that even the lightest bras placed pressure on the lymphatic system.
So might this
have a connection to more serious conditions such as cancer? We
know that the incidence and mortality of breast cancer is highest
in North America and northern Europe. The next highest is southern
Europe and Latin America, and the lowest in Asia and Africa. Researchers
Singer and Grismaijer observed the Maoris of New Zealand who have
integrated with modern mainstream life of their country had the
same incidence of breast cancer as the other women in the population.
However the aboriginals of Australia have practically no breast
cancer. These women are not integrated into westernized society
and do not regularly wear bras. They learned that women from Japan
and Fiji and many other cultures significantly increased their chances
of developing breast cancer when they started wearing bras.
The European
Journal of Cancer published a study that discovered that premenopausal
women who do not wear bras are less than half as likely to get cancer
as those who regularly wear a bra. A study done by Singer and Grismaier
involving 4,500 women of our own culture and their bra wearing habits
showed some amazing findings. Three out of four women who wore their
bras 24 hours a day developed breast cancer. For women who wore
their bra more than 12 hours a day, the chance of getting breast
cancer was 1 in 7. For those who wore their bras less than 12 hours
a day, the number plummeted to 1 in 152. For those who rarely or
never wore a bra the incidence of breast cancer was 1 in 168.
Until further
research is done, one thing is clear. There is significant evidence
that many hours of wearing a bra can have a long term affect on
the health of the breast and health in general. Why not play it
safe and reduce the risk by reducing the hours of constriction?
To establish
a breast health baseline and to get an understanding of your current
overall health condition, come to HealthWalk for a Digital Infrared
Thermal Imaging (DITI) of your breast and body. The procedure is
FDA approved, non-invasive, has zero radiation and your scans are
analyzed by specially trained MD’s certified by ACCT so that you
have the most accurate assessment possible. At HealthWalk we have
the technology, experience, supplements and products to support
the wellbeing of your mind, body and spirit so that you and your
body can be functioning at your highest potential. Please contact
us through our website www.healthwalk.com, by email info@healthwalk.com,
phone 760-929-1520 and come visit us in our integrated health center
in Carlsbad, CA soon.
Join Dr.
Anna Walden on the Modern Girl’s Guide to Sex, Love and Money
show, hosted by Natalie Pace on Wednesday, December 9, 2009 at 9:00
a.m. PT. Go to BlogTalkRadio.com/NataliePace
for call-in instructions.
Please note:
This article has not been evaluated by the Food and Drug Administration.
The information herein is not intended to diagnose, treat, cure
or prevent any disease.
HealthWalk
is a separate entity from NataliePace.com and NataliePace.com offers
no guarantees of, nor do we endorse, their products and/or services.
HealthWalk,
the leading edge, non-invasive integrated healthcare center and
products company, has specially priced Health and Wellness Products
and Services for NataliePace.com subscribers. HealthWalk is offering
10% discount for NataliePace.com subscribers on all individual HealthWalk
products and services. Please mention the discount code, HWNP upon
ordering.

Call
HealthWalk at 877-255-4703 or email info@healthwalk.com
www.healthwalk.com
HealthWalk,
5825Avenida Encinas suite 111, Carlsbad CA 92008
You
can lose everything in life and make it all back - With one exception…
Your Health
HealthWalk
offers customized, non-invasive and effective support to enable
your body’s own innate powers to regain and enhance health, performance
and healing. HealthWalk is
dedicated to supporting and empowering you to achieve and maintain
vibrant wellness. HealthWalk
is a non-invasive, integrative healthcare facility with a global
umbrella of leading edge technologies, services, natural supplements
and products backed by over 20 years of research. HealthWalk
is based in Carlsbad, CA.
www.healthwalk.com
Phone
877.255.4703 info@healthwalk.com
|
|
Municipal
Bonds—Staying on the Safe Side of the Street in Rough Times.
A
FINRA
Investor Alert.
Municipal securities—often
called "muni bonds"—are bonds issued by states, cities, counties
and other governmental entities to raise money to build roads, schools
and a host of other projects for the public good. FINRA and the
Municipal Securities Rulemaking Board (MSRB) are issuing this Alert
to remind investors that while munis have historically been considered
relatively conservative investments, they do, like all bond investments,
carry risk. As some state and local jurisdictions struggle with
the fall-out from current economic conditions, investors should
be aware that:
- Defaults,
while quite rare, do occur.
- Information
about financial problems that affect the bond’s issuer has not
always been readily available to investors.
- The current
market value of a municipal bond may be hard to determine because
many municipal bonds trade infrequently.
- A bond’s
market value may change for reasons having nothing to do with
the financial condition of the issuer, such as a change in interest
rates.
- In cases
where an issuer has purchased bond insurance or some other protection
feature, the higher overall credit rating of a bond may be more
reflective of that protection than of the financial condition
of the issuer.
Investors considering
an investment in municipal bonds should bear in mind that no two
municipal bonds are created equal—and they should carefully evaluate
each investment, being sure to obtain up-to-date information about
both the bond and its issuer. This Alert describes the basics of
municipal bonds, lists smart tips for considering a muni investment
and provides links to helpful resources—including a new Investor
Checklist, FINRA’s Smart
Investing in Bonds and the MSRB’s EMMA
website —to help investors avoid some of the most common pitfalls
of municipal bond investing.
Muni
Bond Basics
Municipal
bonds generally pay a specified amount of interest (usually semiannually)
and return the principal to you on a specific maturity date. One
key reason many individual investors buy municipal bonds is the
tax benefits: interest on the vast majority of municipal bonds is
free of federal income tax, and if you live in the state or city
issuing the bond, you may also be exempt from state or city taxes
on your interest income.
There are two
common types of municipal bonds:
- General
Obligation Bonds, referred to as GO bonds, are issued by states,
cities or counties. They are backed by the "full faith and
credit" of the government entity issuing the bonds. The creditworthiness
of GO bonds is based primarily on the economic strength of the
issuer's tax base.
- Revenue
Bonds are backed solely by fees or other revenue generated
or collected by a facility, such as tolls from a bridge or road,
or leasing fees. Bonds that are backed by a specific tax or assessment
of a government entity, such as a tourist tax or other special
tax or assessment, also are often considered to be revenue bonds.
Unlike GO bonds, revenue bonds are not backed by the full faith
and credit of the government entity issuing the bonds. Instead,
the creditworthiness of revenue bonds depends on the financial
success of the specific project they are issued to fund, on the
revenues of a specific operational component of the government
entity, or on the amounts raised by a specific tax or special
assessment.
Historically,
very few muni bonds have gone into default. But defaults can occur.
Defaults tend to be higher for revenue bonds than for GO bonds—especially
those that back private-use projects such as nursing homes, hospitals
or toll roads.
Investors can
buy and sell municipal bonds when they are initially issued or in
the secondary market through the approximately 2,200 FINRA-registered
firms and banks registered with the Securities and Exchange Commission
as brokers or dealers in municipal securities. It is important to
work with a broker and firm you trust. The firm and broker should
have muni bond experience, and the broker should have the skills
to conduct an analysis of the credit quality of the municipal investment.
Risk
Factors
When
it comes to evaluating a municipal bond, a major focus should be
on the issuer’s ability to meet its financial obligations. A key
question to ask is: How likely is the bond’s issuer to default?
This is referred to as "default risk."
One way to evaluate
an issuer’s default risk is to assess its financial condition. When
a muni bond issuer offers a new bond for sale, it usually discloses
the details of the offering and information about its financial
condition in the bond’s "official statement" (analogous
to the prospectus used for corporate securities offerings). This
information is typically updated each year—and also from time-to-time
through "material events notices" concerning, for example,
delinquency in principal and interest payments, other types of defaults,
rating changes, events affecting the tax-exempt status of the bond,
bond calls and other events.
These disclosures
have historically been difficult and expensive for muni bond investors
to obtain. Unlike publicly traded companies that issue stocks and
bonds, muni bond issuers are generally exempt from registering their
securities with the Securities and Exchange Commission and do not
file ongoing disclosures, including audited financial statements,
with any securities regulator. You may be able to get this information,
for a fee, through one of the Nationally Recognized Municipal Securities
Information Repositories (NRMSIRs).
The MSRB currently
makes official statements and other muni bond disclosures available
to the public for free through its Electronic Municipal Market Access
(EMMA).
Beginning on July 1, 2009, all ongoing disclosures submitted by
issuers will become available to the public for free through EMMA,
along with real-time trade pricing and up-to-date interest rate
information on variable rate and auction rate securities.
|
Investor
Tip: Ask Your Broker About Disclosure—Under
SEC and MSRB rules,1 the brokerage firms and banks
that sell muni bonds are required to have procedures in place
to obtain material event notices and other disclosure. Ask
your broker if a bond’s issuer is up to date with its reporting
of its annual financial/operating data. Treat missing or
past due financial information as a potential red flag.
|
Credit ratings
can also help you evaluate a bond’s default risk. However, it is
important to realize that these ratings are estimates only
and should be only one of many factors in evaluating a municipal
bond investment. Because ratings can change at any time, do not
assume the rating shown on the official statement when the bond
was first issued remains in effect if you buy the bond at a later
date. Be sure to ask your broker for the current published ratings
on any bond you are considering (and any bonds in your portfolio).
A high credit
rating is not a seal of approval and neither reflects nor guarantees
stability of market value or liquidity. In other words, a high
rating does not mean that you will be able to sell an investment
when you want or need to—particularly if you sell before the bond
matures—or that you’ll get the price you expected.
That said, a
low credit rating may very well be a sign of a bond’s increased
risk of default or an indicator of greater liquidity risk and price
level risk. As such, a low credit rating should not be taken
lightly. So-called "high yield" munis often have low credit
ratings—the higher return is meant to compensate investors for the
higher level of risk they incur.
|
Bond
Insurance and Credit Ratings:
Some muni bond issuers include a repayment protection feature—most
often bond insurance—to insure their bonds at the time they
are issued. A bond with insurance generally is able to come
to market with a higher credit rating, making the bond more
attractive to buyers, and at the same time lowering the issuing
cost to the municipality. The protection can shield an investor
from default risk to the extent that the protection provider
promises to buy the bonds back or to take over payments of
interest and principal if the issuer defaults.
However, any guarantees are only as sound as the protection
agent/insurance company that makes them. For this reason,
when considering an insured bond, be sure to take into account
the credit rating and long-term viability of the bond insurer.
Following recent economic turmoil, the credit ratings of
most bond insurers have been downgraded—and, in many cases,
the current credit profile of the municipal bond issuer itself
may now be higher than the current credit rating of the bond
insurer.
|
Not all bonds
have credit ratings. While an absence of a credit rating is not,
by itself, a determinant of low credit quality, investors in non-rated
bonds should be prepared to make their own independent credit analysis
of the bonds. If you are unable to do so, ask yourself if the assumption
of greater risk is worth the higher yield these bonds may carry.
|
Interest
Rate Risk.
Muni bonds are also subject to interest rate risk, which is
the risk that an increase in interest rates may reduce the
market value of a bond you hold. Interest rate risk—also referred
to as market risk—increases the longer you hold a bond. This
is especially true if you purchase a bond when interest rates
are at or near historically low rates, as they have been recently.
Rising interest rates generally make new bonds more attractive
because they earn a higher rate of return. Interest rate risk
and other risk factors are described more fully in FINRA’s
Smart
Bond Investing.
|
Smart
Tips
Your
overall investment strategy should be based on a number of factors,
including how much risk you are willing to take, the purpose of
your investment (income, growth or some of both), your investment
horizon (when do think you will need the money) and whether it’s
a good fit with other investments in your portfolio. These smart
tips can help muni investors protect themselves:
- Check
out the broker and firm. A securities salesperson must be
properly licensed, and his or her firm must be registered with
the MSRB and with FINRA, the SEC or a state securities regulator—depending
on the type of business the firm conducts. For a broker,
use FINRA
BrokerCheck or call toll-free (800) 289-9999. For
an investment adviser, use the SEC's Investment
Adviser Public Disclosure Web site. To confirm MSRB
registration, contact
MSRB.
- Don’t
reach for yield. Never make your investment decision based
solely on a bond’s yield unless you are willing to assume more
risk. The higher return you are "reaching for" is an
indicator of increased risk.
- Read the
Official Statement. Ask your broker for information about
the municipal security before you purchase it. The bond’s Official
Statement is where you will find a bond’s important characteristics,
from yield to the bond’s call schedule. Be aware that an Official
Statement may not be prepared for offerings under $1 million and
certain offerings sold primarily to institutional investors.
- Keep up
with material news, including updated financial information and
material event notices. An issuer’s circumstances may change
over time. Stay abreast of changes to underlying economic factors,
a bond’s credit worthiness, and the issuer’s financial capacity.
Ask your broker how current the issuer is with its disclosure—and
be aware that an issuer’s failure to furnish current information
about its financial situation is a potential red flag. You can
access on-going disclosure filings for free using EMMA.
- Evaluate
a bond’s price. Bonds are generally issued in multiples of
$5,000, referred to as a bond’s face or par value. But they can
trade above or below par in the secondary market for many reasons,
including changes in current interest rates or the real or perceived
credit quality of the issuer. Use FINRA’s Market
Data Center or MSRB’s EMMA
to check a bond’s trading history, including how actively the
bond trades (many trade infrequently) and recent pricing. If the
issuer has filed a distress notice but has bonds trading at or
above par, ask why.
- Do your
homework. Before buying any municipal bond, carefully consider
the financial condition of the state, city or county that is issuing
the bond and any other party that is responsible for payment on
the bond. For revenue bonds, ask whether the issuer’s revenue
has been enough to cover the payments it must make on the bond
(also known as the "debt service ratio"). With all munis,
ask your broker about the bond’s call schedule and see if the
bond’s credit rating has gone up, down or remained stable.
- Do the
tax math. Run the numbers (or ask your broker or tax advisor)
to determine whether buying a tax-free muni bond, particularly
in your home state, makes sense for you. For more information
and a formula to help you compare yields, see Muni
Math in FINRA’s Smart Bond Investing.
- Diversify.
Market risks can be mitigated to a certain extent by diversification
among different asset classes and within the same asset class.
When diversifying within the muni bond asset class, consider diversification
by issuer, location and maturity date. One way to diversify
your muni bond holdings is to invest in a muni bond mutual fund
or muni ETF. Be sure to research the securities contained in a
given fund or ETF, as well as maturity lengths (longer maturities
usually mean greater risk). Be aware that bond funds and ETFs
may invest in a narrow group of holdings (only tax-deferred bonds,
for instance) and so your diversification may be limited. Bond
funds and ETFs can decline in value, and prices fluctuate, making
it impossible to know the value of your holdings prior to sale.
ADDITIONAL
RESOURCES
To receive the
latest Investor Alerts and other important investor information
sign up for Investor
News.
|
|
Medical Bills: The Biggest Risk to Your
Retirement.
by Rande
Spiegelman, CPA, CFP®, Vice President of Financial
Planning, Schwab
Center for Financial Research
Updated October
28, 2009
After years
of planning and saving for retirement, the last thing you want is
for unexpected medical bills to undo your hard work. But there's
no bigger threat to your retirement than a serious illness. Without
adequate health insurance, even a relatively minor hospital stay
could derail your finances. A major illness could be financially
devastating.
The good news is that there are steps you can take now to mitigate
the risk that health care problems in retirement could decimate
your plans, or those of your loved ones. If you're working, you
likely have insurance through your employer or under the umbrella
of a small business. But the rules of the road change in retirement,
when you may need to obtain individual health care coverage until
you become eligible for Medicare at age 65, or to supplement it
afterwards.
Here are some
insurance options to consider now:
Private health insurance
Not all policies are created equal—try to choose one that matches
your needs and ability to cover certain costs on your own. Costs
may vary by the state you reside in, family status, health and lifestyle
(are you a smoker or in a high-risk occupation?), as well as coverage
levels, coinsurance, deductibles, copayments and other factors.
If you're under 65, compare the cost of continuing your medical
and dental coverage with your former employer (for up to 18 months
through the federal COBRA program) with the cost of insurance you
might be able to obtain on your own.
In addition, most states have programs that will allow you to extend
COBRA coverage. For example, eligible California residents have
the option to extend COBRA coverage an additional 18 months. Those
60 or older who have been with their employer for at least five
years can extend COBRA coverage until they turn 65.
Also, remember that you were probably already paying a significant
portion of your health insurance premiums at work through payroll
deductions. For example, if your employer was deducting $135 every
two weeks, you were already paying $3,500 a year. If that's the
case, you would only need to budget an extra $4,000 if you bought
a new policy costing $7,500 a year. Of course, you could pay your
insurance costs out of your retirement cash flow. Or, you could
begin saving now to ensure that you have enough set aside. But,
keep in mind, because increases in health care costs tend to significantly
exceed the normal rate of inflation, you can't simply rely on retirement
savings rules of thumb (see "Calculating the Costs").
|
Calculating
the costs
How much money you'll need to cover health care costs in retirement
depends on several key unknowables—how much health care you'll
need for how long and the inflation-adjusted return on your
money. Because of fast-growing costs, we assume a health care
inflation rate roughly triple the projected Consumer Price
Index.
To illustrate, let's assume:
- First-year
costs = $7,500
- Health
care inflation rate = 8%
- Rate
of return on lump sum = 7%
- Time
horizon = 30 years
We did
the math,* and you'd need a lump sum of about $260,000 at
the start of your retirement to cover your costs for 30 years.
If you assumed 25 years, you'd need about $210,000. Or, with
first-year costs of $10,000 and a 30-year horizon, you'd need
about $345,000.
Remember, these calculations are a hypothetical example and
don't account for the reality that investment returns fluctuate.
Using a sophisticated Monte Carlo simulation assuming a moderate
portfolio return, we estimate you'd need about $360,000 to
achieve a 90% chance of being able to pay retirement health
costs of $7,500 in the first year, rising 8% a year for 30
years.
Estimating your potential retiree health care costs now can
help you plan properly for your future.
*The formula is for the present value of a growing annuity:
$7,500 [(1 – ((1.08) ÷ (1.07))30) ÷ ( –0.01)]1.07
|
Health
savings accounts (HSAs)
HSAs combine high-deductible health insurance with a tax-free
savings account that can be invested as you see fit, similar to
an IRA. You choose a sum you're willing to pay out of pocket for
medical expenses. The insurer pays most of the bills over that amount.
You meet your own costs by making tax-deductible contributions to
the HSA and using that money, tax-free, for qualified medical bills.
For 2009, the annual maximum contribution is $5,950 for families
and $3,000 for individuals (individuals age 55 and older can contribute
an additional $1,000 "catch-up" amount). For 2010, the limits are
$6,150 and $3,050, respectively. Any unspent money stays in the
HSA for future use. And there is no annual "use it or lose it" provision,
as there is with flexible spending accounts (FSAs).
HSAs work best if you're rarely sick and can build up big reserves,
or you can afford to pay medical bills from your current income
and will treat the HSA as if it were a tax-favored retirement account.
In addition, certain states still do not conform to federal tax
rules on HSAs (e.g., California, New Jersey, Wisconsin). So, you'll
want to check with your tax advisor about specific state rules regarding
these accounts.
Regardless of age, withdrawals from HSAs are tax-free and penalty-free
if used for qualified medical expenses. Otherwise, withdrawals are
taxable and subject to a 10% penalty. After age 65, however, withdrawals
are penalty-free (but subject to income tax if used for nonmedical
expenses). To qualify for an HSA, you must:
- Have a high-deductible
health plan on the first day of the month. For 2009, the minimum
deductible for such plans is $1,150 for self-only coverage and
$2,300 for family coverage (out-of-pocket maximums are $5,800
and $11,600, respectively). For 2010, the minimum deductibles
are $1,200 and $2,400 ($5,950 and $11,900 out-of-pocket maximums).
- Have no other
health coverage except what is permitted under IRS rules (see
page 4 of IRS Publication 969 for details).
- Not be enrolled
in Medicare.
- Not be claimed
as a dependent on another person's tax return.
HSAs aren't
for everyone. While they may work well for young, healthy employees,
HSAs may not be as beneficial for people who'll likely face higher
annual out-of-pocket health costs, such as older workers, less-fit
employees of any age, or families with kids needing frequent medical
attention. Also, high-deductible plans may not make sense for lower-wage
earners who can't afford the out-of-pocket expense.
In retirement
If you're 65 or older and in retirement, other options exist:
- Medicare:
If you're already receiving Social Security benefits prior to
age 65, you will be automatically enrolled in Medicare Part A.
If not, you should apply for Medicare three months before your
65th birthday. For everything you ever wanted to know about what
plans are available, plus details about coverage, costs and how
to enroll, see Medicare
and You on www.medicare.gov.
Long-term
care insurance
The cost of this care can be staggering. The average daily rate
for a private room in a nursing home is $206 ($75,190 a year), and
a semiprivate room is only slightly less expensive—$183 a day ($66,795
a year). Home care is even pricier. The average hourly rate for
home health assistants is $19, making 24-hour care more than $400
a day, or over $150,000 a year.
What many don't
realize until it's too late is that Medicare doesn't cover a lot
of these and other expenses (see table below). And costs keep rising.
The American Council of Life Insurers projects a 2.6-year stay in
a nursing home will cost about $496,000 in 30 years (roughly $191,000
per year).
|
What
Medicare doesn’t cover
|
|
Service
|
What you’ll
pay for:
|
|
Acupuncture
|
Any type
of acupuncture
|
|
Cosmetic
surgery
|
Cosmetic
surgery, unless it’s needed because of accidental injury or
to improve the function of a malformed part of the body
|
|
Dental
services
|
Most routine
dental care and procedures such as cleanings, fillings, tooth
extractions, dentures, dental plates or other dental devices
|
|
Eye exams
|
Routine
eye exams (refractions) for eyeglasses or contacts
|
|
Eyeglasses/contact
lenses
|
Eyeglasses
or contact lenses except for intraocular lenses following
cataract surgery
|
|
Nursing
home care
|
Custodial
care, like help with bathing or dressing, when it’s the only
kind of care you need
|
|
Physicals
|
Routine
annual physicals, except the one-time "Welcome to Medicare"
physical exam
|
|
Medical
supplies used at home
|
Common
medical supplies like bandages and gauze
|
|
Transportation
(routine)
|
Transportation
to get routine health care
|
|
Health
care outside the U.S.
|
Most health
care while you are traveling outside the United States
|
Source: "Your
Medicare Benefits," www.medicare.gov.
On the other hand, according to the National Association of Insurance
Commissioners, most people over 65 (about 59%) don't spend any time
in a nursing home. Furthermore, the average stay for those who do
enter a nursing home is only about 2½ years. Though you may never
need it, if you're near or in retirement you might consider long-term
care insurance, which covers medical and nonmedical care for those
with a chronic illness or disability. This insurance may be particularly
attractive if you have insufficient assets to self-insure but a
net worth too high to receive Medicaid.
If you do opt for this additional coverage, note that premiums can
vary widely, depending on age and coverage, and tend to be most
cost-effective for those between 50 and 65 who are in good health.
Read the fine print to determine what's covered—skilled nursing,
custodial care, assisted living? Also ask yourself: What medical
conditions qualify for benefits? How long before they kick in? How
long will they last? What's the maximum daily benefit? Is there
inflation coverage? How solid is the insurer? And what's its history
with regard to long-term health care policies? Look for a policy
that is guaranteed renewable with locked-in premium rates.
Finally, we recommend you seek out objective sources of information,
such as your state insurance commission. For example, California
provides consumer information and a handy premium calculator. Or
check out A Shopper's Guide to Long-Term Care Insurance,
produced by the National Association of Insurance Commissioners.
As with all your health care choices, it's also wise to check with
your insurance broker, professional associations or affinity groups
like the American Association of Retired Persons to compare costs
and benefits.
1. Corporate Insight, 2007.
Important Disclosures
The example provided is for illustrative purposes only and is not
intended to represent results you should expect to achieve.
This information is not intended to be a substitute for specific
individualized tax, legal or investment planning advice. Where specific
advice is necessary or appropriate, Schwab recommends consultation
with a qualified tax advisor, CPA, financial planner or investment
manager.
The Schwab Center for Financial Research is a division of Charles
Schwab & Co., Inc.
|
|
You Vs. Wall Street.
by Natalie
Pace.
Buy and
Hold Hasn’t Worked for a Decade. Find Out What Does.
Includes
my Hot News on Cool Stocks List.
November
30, 2009
General
Stock Market Performance
|
Wednesday,1.3.2007
|
Monday,1.2.2008
|
Monday,1.2.2009
|
Monday,11.30.09
|
Gains 3-yr, 2-yr & 10 mo.
|
|
Dow: 12,474.52
|
Dow: 13,044.12
|
Dow: 9,034.69
|
Dow: 10,280.07
|
-18% + -21%
& +14%
|
|
Nasdaq: 2,423.16
|
Nasdaq: 2,609.63
|
Nasdaq: 1,632.21
|
Nasdaq: 2,125.12
|
-12% & -19%
& +30%
|
|
S&P: 1,416.60
|
S&P: 1,447.16
|
S&P: 931.80
|
S&P: 1,087.54
|
-23% & -25%
& +17%
|
Wall Street
Highs/Lows in the New Millennium:
|
Index
|
Low
|
High
|
|
Dow Jones Industrial Average
|
6,547 (3.9.09)
|
14,164 (10.9.07)
|
|
NASDAQ Composite Index
|
1,114 (10.9.02)
|
5,060.34 (3.10.00)
|
Hot
News on Cool Stocks Highlights!
 |
| Photo
Caption: Stacie Isabella Turk. Ribbonhead.com. © 2008.
|
578% gains
on U.S. Gold!
NASDAQ Leads Market Returns, With 30% Gains -- compared to +44%
rise in gold prices and only +14% for the Dow Jones Industrial Average.
85% of the positions listed in 2008 & 2009 are in the money.
Woo hoo!
TipsTraders
ranked me #11, above over 830 A-list pundits, in 2008.
Market
Update:
NASDAQ
is up 30% (indicating a bull market), but gold is at a staggering
44% gain on the year (indicating lack of consumer confidence). The
politicians all chant that we’re on the road to recovery, while the
Federal Open Market Committee refuses to raise interest rates and
foresees continuing to have "exceptionally low levels of the
federal funds rate for an extended period." Productivity numbers
are impressive but both the FOMC and Richard Posner suspect this is
due to "significant cost cutting" rather than technological
innovation that promotes sustained productivity output going forward.
And further,
the earnings numbers frankly can’t be trusted. So many of the accounting
rules have been suspended or amended. And the earnings that are
in existence, are being "stimulated" with short-term government
incentives, like the Cash for Clunkers Program, which accounted
for more than half of the Gross Domestic Product growth in the 3rd
quarter of 2009.
- There were
no pension or Other Post Employment Benefits accounted for in
many of the 2009 earnings reports.
- Banks are
rolling over bad loans, or hanging on, or farming them out to
special portfolios, instead of writing off the losses. Mark to
market accounting has been suspended.
- Commercial
real estate loans are now receiving policy accommodation encouragements
from the Federal Open Market Committee, which has adopted a policy
statement supporting prudent commercial real estate (CRE) loan
workouts" because they are "often in the best interest
of both financial institutions and borrowers, particularly during
difficult economic conditions." Meaning here’s yet another
way banks and commercial real estate owners can massage their
earnings reports.
- Many corporations
are slow to pay bills and slow to credit customers – a hallmark
in the years leading up to the 2001-2002 high-profile corporate
bankruptcies of Enron, Global Crossing, Worldcom, et al.
So, what do
you do? Get smart. Buy and hold doesn’t work in a slow growth economy
that is fueled by free, easy money and lax accounting standards.
That is a recipe for boom and bust cycles, which are easily capitalized
upon with annual rebalancing, provided you are properly diversified.
Modern Portfolio Theory, diversified funds (size/style and hot industries)
and annual rebalancing are made easy-as-a-pie chart in my book,
You
Vs. Wall Street: Grow What You’ve Got and Win Back What You Lost.
So have a little
faith (not blind faith) that you can do this, if you just get the
right tools and education. You’ll find out how to make the magic
of Stock Report Cards and pie charts work to provide you with money
while you sleep in the pages of You
Vs. Wall Street.
"You
Vs. Wall Street
"provides almost fool proof methods for growing wealth
for the long haul," according to Success Magazine. Readers
call You Vs. Wall Street a "must-read financial bible,"
and "just what some readers need to find themselves exponentially
richer in the coming years." You vs. Wall Street teaches
you how to win on Wall Street in any market—bull or bear. Now is
the time to choose wisdom over blind faith, to invest in winning
companies and to whistle all the way to your local bailed out bank.
• MASTER THE
UNIQUE THREE-PART INVESTMENT PLAN
• LEARN THE
EARNINGS MAGIC OF STOCK REPORT CARDS
• DISCOVER THE
FOOLPPROOF GET RICH AND STAY RICH PROGRAM
• FIND OUT HOW
TO AVOID THE TOP ELEVEN INVESTING MISTAKES
I also teach
these strategies in a 3-day investing retreat. Investors who attend
the retreat walk out with a blueprint that works for the rest of
their life. They have selected the exact ten funds they are most
interested in, and know how to select new funds as different industries
become the next hot thing. They know which months are best for profit-taking
and which for buying back in, historically, to maximize the potential
for capturing gains annually.
If you are
interested in attending my March 27-29, 2009 Get Rich and Green
investing retreat in Santa Monica, California (the best place to
be in March), please call 866.476.7442 or email info@NataliePace.com
right away. The retreat only seats a dozen people, and only a handful
of seats remain. As my gift to you, I’ve extended the early bird
rates of $999/person (based upon two people registering together)
or $1299/person.
Groups like
the Green Goddess Investment Club are reporting 47% gains over the
last 12 months, using my strategies. "With the valuable guidance
of our mentor Natalie Pace we out performed the bear market with
the extraordinary result of 48% GAINS!!!!!!" Cindy Ciscowski,
President, Green Goddess Investment Club. Options traders and Certified
Financial Planners brag that their portfolio returns are "staggering,"
in the wake of learning my methods, after just three days of training.
Other retreat attendees earn back the price of he retreat in the
first week.
Track Record
of our Reporting
While
the markets are still down significantly since their high in October
of 2007, the Hot News and Cooling Off lists below have a winning
track record – in bear and bull market years. 83 positions
listed below – 85% -- have delivered impressive gains over the past
two years, even while the Dow Jones Industrial Average is trading
lower than it was ten years ago! Only fifteen of our listings
went in the opposite direction of the reporting, which is quite
impressive given the horrible market drop of 2008-2009.
Yes, many, but
not all, of our top performers in 2008 and 2009 are shorts, which
is why we added options training to the retreat. Remember that the
trading portfolio should be equal to your experience, and should
not be part of your nest egg. (The nest egg is money you earn while
you sleep, not while you day-trade.) If you’re new, you should be
using education or fun money, not your nest egg, to learn on. Take
your profits early and often in these volatile, whip-sawing years.
3 out
of 6 Company of the Year selections more than doubled. My
2003, 2004 and 2007 Companies of the Year posted up to 9000% gains
(Taser), up to 690% gains (Opsware) and up to 215% gains (Suntech
Power Holdings), respectively, before we took them off of the list.
MySpace, my 2006 Company of the Year, was a large part of
News Corp’s success with shareholders that year. So three
out of six are superperformers, and one (Myspace) performed well
above the market. That’s the kind of record that puts you on top
on Wall Street. (I launched my first publication on 11.15.02,
and featured the first Company of the Year on 1.1.03.)
TipsTraders.com
continues to list me as a Highly Recommended Stock Picker, with
their independent ranking system, where I’ve repeatedly occupied
the #1 position and have consistently scored at the top of their
830 A-list pundits. I scored a #11 ranking for 2008. Some of my
best picks include: Google (GOOG) +585%, Opsware (OPSW) +690%, Rio
Tinto (RTP) +145%, Sohu (SOHU) +150%, Suntech Power Holdings (STP)
+107%, Taser (TASR) up to 9000% gains. Some of the best picks in
2008 and 2009 were put options – on the Cooling Off list -- which
is why I added options training to my 3-day Get Rich and Green Investing
Retreat. Look on the Cooling Off list for details on the incredible
gains options investors enjoyed on Wells Fargo, Fannie Mae, Toll
Brothers, KB Home, Novastar Financial and more there.
This stock newsletter
was the first to list the following 911 alerts:
- To get Fannie
Mae and Freddie Mac out of your 401(k) in 2003
- Avoid General
Motors and other American auto-manufacturers in 2004
- Get out
of Dodge (real
estate) in 2005
- Trim back
on Faded
Blue Chips in 2006
- Lehman
Bros’
colossal insider selling in 2006
Market
Movers:
The Federal
Open Market Committee and Monetary Policy
The
Fed funds rate continues to be "0 to ¼ percent." In the
11.04.09 meeting press release, the Federal Reserve Board further
elaborated on the reasoning behind the rock bottom rates, writing:
"Household spending appears to be expanding but remains constrained
by ongoing job losses, sluggish income growth, lower housing wealth,
and tight credit. Businesses are still cutting back on fixed investment
and staffing, though at a slower pace... Economic activity is likely
to remain weak for a time."
That is Fed-speak
for "We are doing everything to stimulate the economy, which
should work eventually, but the situation is still rough, folks."
Deflation is no longer much of a concern, and the Feds think that
inflation is far enough away that Fed Fund rates will remain exceptionally
low for an "extended period."
The Milken
Institute estimates that the bailout to date has already
cost the taxpayer $9.8 trillion.
The next FOMC
meeting takes place on December 15-16, 2009.
Second
Estimate GDP growth rates for 2Q 2009 were revised downward
to 2.8% (from 3.5%) according to the Bureau of Economic Analysis.
This was the first positive GDP growth rate since the 4th
quarter of 2007. Final GDP growth rates for 2Q 2009 and 1Q 2009
were a decline of -0.7% & -5.5%, respectively. The economy contracted
at -6.3% in the 4th quarter of 2008. What happened between
2008 and 3Q 2009? Massive government spending is the main driver
of the economy at this point. The Cash for Clunkers Program is responsible
for over half of the GDP growth, both in government incentives and
stimulated, incentive-related consumer spending.
Final GDP growth
rates for 3Q 2009 will be released on December 22, 2009 at 8:30
a.m. ET. These release days tend to be very active on Wall Street.
No surprise that the 3rd quarter of 2009 was the first
positive GDP report since the 4th quarter of 2007, however,
if the second estimates come in lower than 2.8%, investors could
lose confidence (and vice versa if the numbers are revised upward).
For more BEA release dates, go to the BEA.gov
website and be sure to visit the NataliePace.com calendar section
often.
EDUCATIONAL
OPPORTUNITES AND INFORMATION:
1. FOMC
Information: Interested in reading the minutes
of the November 3-4, 2009 FOMC meeting for yourself? You
can. The official Federal Reserve document is available online.
Click on FOMC,
or go to FederalReserve.gov to read!
The tentative
FOMC meeting schedule for the 2009 calendar is: December 15-16,
2009 (Tuesday-Wednesday), January 26-27, 2010 (Tuesday-Wednesday),
March 16 (Tuesday), April 27-28 (Tuesday-Wednesday), June 22-23
(Tuesday-Wednesday), August 10 (Tuesday), September 21 (Tuesday),
November 2-3 (Tuesday-Wednesday), December 14 (Tuesday), January
25-26, 2011 (Tuesday-Wednesday).
2.
Calendar
Section: Conferences, Online Chats and more:
Check out the Calendar section of NataliePace.com regularly. Be
the first to know the dates of the mid-month Hot News on Cool Stocks
Update and the publication date of our next ezine. Join me on BlogTalkRadio.com.
Get more information on how to best use our articles in the FAQs
article, located under the Investor Edu link on the home page of
NataliePace.com.
Don’t miss
the Modern Girls’ Guide to Sex, Love and Money Show with Natalie
Pace on BlogTalkRadio.com Wednesday, December 9, 2009, at 9:00 a.m.
PT. if you’re considering throwing in the towel and giving back
a home or declaring personal bankruptcy, don’t do it before joining
this show and asking questions of real estate specialist Steve Dietrich.
(Your Qs are anonymous. Just pick a chat name that is different
from your own.) Steve has a MBA from Harvard and decades of VIP
real estate consulting experience in Los Angeles, CA.
Get call-in
and log-in instructions at BlogTalkRadio.com/NataliePace.
This is a Q&A format, where you can call in or Twitter in your
questions. Be sure to write down your most pressing questions now,
and become a friend to Natalie Pace on Twitter at Twitter.com/NataliePace,
so that you can Tweet on the show.
3.
Survey
Results: Each
month we have three new surveys so that we can stay in touch with
your needs and desires. Cast your vote on our survey page! What
do you really want this holiday season?
4. Euro
interest rates: ECB
rates are at 1.00% (main refinancing), 1.75% (marginal lending)
and 0.25% (deposit facility). The next meeting and interest rate
announcement is scheduled for December 3, 2009 at 2:30 p.m. CET.
(December 17, 2009 after that.)
Hot
Stocks List
Investors
who "never pay retail," note that the BOLD highlighted stocks
are trading at their 52-week lows or near the price featured in
NataliePace.com’s article. This may be a good buying opportunity.
(If the stocks are not highlighted, then in our estimation, this
is not a good time to buy. Reasons are explained in the news commentary.)
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 (if you have already purchased them). 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. And remember that these "Stocks
on Steroids" are not intended to be part of your nest egg strategy
at all – not even for "pros." If you’ve never traded individual
stocks before, this is your "fun" or "education"
money. You should not stake your future on anything that you don’t
have mastery over.
Hot
News List (highlighted). Be sure that you are buying low.
AOL
(AOL)
MEMC Electronics (WFR)
Sunpower (SPWRA)
Profit-Taking
(Take your profits early and often):
KCI Concepts
(KCI) +60%|
LDK
Solar (LDK) +60%
New Zealand Dollar Currency ETF (BNZ) +34%
U.S. Gold (UXG) +566%
DELETIONS
(Take your profits early and often):
None
HOT NEWS
on COOL STOCKS LIST
| Company
|
NP
owns? |
Symbol
|
Price
when featured |
Price
11.30.09
|
Year High
Year Low
|
Gains
since original feature |
|
American Superconductor
|
Yes
|
AMSC
|
$30.70
|
$32.63
|
$37.58
$8.22
|
+6%
|
|
Read
"The
Sunny Side"
Vol, 6, issue 3. AMSC should benefit from President Obama’s
commitment to build a "a new smart grid to carry electricity
from coast to coast."
1Q 2009 earnings on 7.30.09: Sales
were up 83% in the 1st quarter over last year.
Looking for a bad market day as a re-entry point. GAAP net
income of $1.8 million, compared to a loss of $6.1 million
a year ago. Cash, cash equivalents, marketable securities
and restricted cash at June 30, 2009 were $103.2 million.
"A solid mix of wind power
and power grid business fueled another record quarter at American
Superconductor," said Greg Yurek, AMSC’s founder and
chief executive officer. "We achieved a strong increase
in power grid-related D-VAR® system revenue and our largest
customer, Sinovel, requested delivery of additional wind turbine
core electrical components during the first quarter to meet
increased demand in China for its 1.5 megawatt wind turbines."
Signed new $100 million contract
with Sinovel, China’s leading wind turbine producer, for core
electrical components to be utilized in Sinovel’s 3 megawatt
(MW) wind turbines, known as the SL3000.
|
|
AOL
|
No
|
AOL
|
$23.00
|
$23.00
|
$27.00
$23.00
|
--
|
|
Read "AOL:
From LOL to OMG"
from Vol, 6, issue 12.
|
|
Ener1
|
No
|
HEV
|
$4.92
|
$5.63
|
$9.49
$2.35
|
+14%
|
|
Read "Life
Begins with (Li) Lithium"
from Vol, 6, issue 4. Won an award of $118.5 million from
the Obama Administration to develop batteries for hybrid and
electric vehicles. Was mentioned by name by President Obama
in his remarks of August 5, 2009.
|
|
Hoku Scientific
Hawaii
RISK: HIGH
|
Yes
|
HOKU
|
$8.03
$2.00
(3.2.09)
|
$2.19
|
$14.55
$1.90
|
-72% &
+10%
|
|
Read "The
Sunny Side,"
Vol, 6, issue 3 and "Solar
Giants Tap a Small Hawaiian Company For Silicon,"
in the Oct. 2007 ezine, Vol, 4, issue 10.
Hoku's key project schedule (based
upon work resuming in October): completing a reactor demonstration
in December 2009, completing construction of 2,500 metric
tons of polysilicon production capacity in March 2010, and
completing construction of the full 4,000 metric tons of capacity,
including on-site trichlorosilane (TCS) production, in December
2010.
On September 29, 2009, Hoku announced
that Tianwei was investing in Hoku and debt financing would
be provided by Tianwei and China Construction Bank for the
construction and development of Hoku's polysilicon production
facility in Pocatello, Idaho. Hoku confirmed that the $50
million in debt, plus prepayments from its existing customers,
is expected to be sufficient to complete construction to the
point where it could commence shipments to customers, and
it intends to delay any additional financing until such time.
On the basis of these funding sources, Hoku reported it is
preparing to issue orders to resume full scale plant construction
at an accelerated pace upon closing of the financing, which
is expected to occur in October 2009.
You can see the facility’s progress
on the home page at HokuCorp.com
|
|
Kinetic Concepts, Inc.
|
No
|
KCI
|
$38.81
$21.05
(12.1.08)
|
$33.61
|
$43.00
$17.86
|
-13% &
+60%
|
|
Read the article, "Beauty
is Skin Deep,"
in Vol, 5, issue 5. If you made a profit of 60%, take your
profits early and often!
REPORTED 3Q 2009 EARNINGS ON 10.21.09.
2009: third quarter 2009 total revenue of $504.4 million,
compared to $503.3 million reported for the third quarter
of 2008. Total revenue for the first nine months of 2009 was
$1.466 billion, up 6% from the prior-year period. Net earnings
for the third quarter of 2009 were $64.6 million, or $0.91
per diluted share, compared to $53.9 million, or $0.75 per
diluted share, for the third quarter of 2008, representing
increases of 20% and 21%, respectively, from the prior-year
periods.
Entered Japanese market on 11.2.09.
FDA approved ABThera™ Open
Abdomen Negative Pressure Therapy System on June 11, 2009.
The new therapy has already been launched, according to Catherine
M. Burzik, KCI’s President and CEO. "I am very pleased
to see the progress of KCI’s business in light of continued
economic and competitive pressures," said Catherine Burzik,
President and Chief Executive Officer of KCI. "KCI continues
to meet its goals in terms of innovation, global market expansion
and operational efficiency. We recently introduced our highly
innovative open abdominal wound system, AbThera, to operating
room surgeons in the U.S. and Europe and we are on track with
our plans for the launch of V.A.C. Therapy in Japan. We look
forward to the second half of the year with confidence."
KCI won its suit in the U.S. against
Smith and Nephew to prevent them from selling foam dressing
kits. On June 15, 2009, The Federal Court of Australia, Victoria
District Registry, issued a temporary injunction prohibiting
Smith & Nephew. Trial in Australia is set for 2010. UK
issued a temporary injunction and the German courts are considering
the same action as well. Smith & Nephew has vowed to appeal.
|
|
LDK Solar
GREEN
|
Yes
|
LDK
|
$30.02
$4.94
(3.2.09)
|
$7.85
|
$76.75
$3.75
|
-74% &
+60%
|
|
Read the
articles, “Green”
in Vol. 6, issue 2 and “Solar
Springs Up Again," in Vol. 5, issue 4.
News
on 11.2.09 that Q-Cells (QCE.F), the German solar cell
company, has terminated an agreement under which LDK supplied
Q-Cells with solar wafers and was threatening to draw back
on its prepayment of $244.4 million to LDK disheartened investors.
Shares were off by over 18% in early trading…
3Q 2009
Earnings on 11.23.09: Net sales for the third quarter of fiscal
2009 were $281.9 million, compared to $228.3 million for the
second quarter of fiscal 2009, and $541.8 million for the
third quarter of fiscal 2008. Net income for the third quarter
of fiscal 2009 was $29.4 million, or $0.27 per diluted ADS,
compared to a net loss of $216.9 million, or $2.03 per diluted
ADS for the second quarter of fiscal 2009. LDK Solar ended
the third quarter of 2009 with $67.8 million in cash and cash
equivalents and $72.7 million in short-term pledged bank deposits.
Analysts (both armchair and of the professional variety) are
gaga over these expectations smashing results. Lots of headlines…
|
|
MEMC Electronics
|
No
|
WFR
|
$11.99
|
$11.99
|
$73.56
$11.32
|
--
|
|
Read "The
Sunny Side"
Vol, 6, issue 3.
Acquisition
of solar developer SunEdison (announced on 10.22.09) should
start putting meat on MEMC’s bottom line in 2010. They now
enter solar power generation with an A-list company in that
field. Recovering after silicon re-pricing completely threw
off their profit margins. Better times going forward.
|
|
New Zealand Dollar currency ETF
by WisdomTree
|
No
|
BNZ
|
$25.17
$18.49
(12.1.08)
|
$24.70
|
$25.31
$16.67
|
-2% &
+34%
|
|
If you made a profit of 34%,
take your profits early and often!
Read the article, "Foreign
Investing:
From BRICs to Barbeys,"
in Vol, 5, issue 7, for more information on why New Zealand
is the new attraction on the world currency markets. New Zealand
has the highest interest rate in the industrialized world.
Currently, the Official Cash Rate is 2.5%. Reserve Bank Governor
Alan Bollard, at the Reserve
Bank of New Zealand,
wrote in a press release on June 11, 2009, "The recent
rise in the New Zealand dollar creates an unhelpful tension
with our projections. A stronger dollar at a time of weak
global growth risks delaying or even reversing the projected
increase in exports, putting the sustainability of recovery
at risk… We expect to keep the OCR at or below the current
level through until the latter part of 2010."
|
|
Satcon
|
No
|
SATC
|
$1.93
|
$1.98
|
$2.57
$1.08
|
+2.5%
|
|
Read
"The
Sunny Side"
Vol, 6, issue 3. Certainly could benefit from the $3.4 billion
that President Obama awarded on October 27, 2009 to Smart
Grid and Clean Power projects. The company makes power converters
as well as grid monitoring systems, and was the company of
choice when Google built their solar plant.
Beware, however, of the continuing
losses and constricted capital environment that has been so
troublesome for clean energy in 2009.
3Q 2009 earnings on Oct. 28, 2009:
$11.7 million in revenue and a net loss of $8.5 million.
"While total sales were down
year over year due to the global recession, revenue for the
third quarter increased 27% over the second quarter of 2009,"
said Steve Rhoades, Satcon’s President and Chief Executive
Officer. "Our top-line growth highlights the successful
execution of our corporate strategy to develop and launch
the industry’s most advanced utility scale solar PV inverter
solutions. In addition, we began to see an increase in bookings
in North America, Europe and China, resulting in current backlog
of over $24 million, positioning us for a solid fourth quarter."
|
|
Sunpower
|
No
|
SPWRA
|
$24.83
|
$20.38
|
$107.00
$18.50
|
-18%
|
|
Read "The
Sunny Side"
in Vol, 6, issue 3.
Sunpower
panels are the most efficient in the world and have helped
countless Solar Decathlon teams win the competition. This
year’s #2 and #3 teams (Illinois and California) both used
Sunpower panels.
3Q earnings
on 10.22.09: Record Q3 2009 revenue of $466 million.
$800 million
in cash and investments. 24 megawatt Montalto power plant
in Italy financed - expected completion Q4 2009. Signed a
14-megawatt supply agreement with Casino Group in France.
Commissioned 25-megawatt project for Florida Power & Light
and began construction of an additional 10-megawatt power
plant. Fab 3 construction in Malaysia on plan; production
scheduled for the second half of 2010.
|
|
U.S. Gold
Colorado USA
RISK: VERY HIGH
|
Yes
|
UXG
|
$5.05
$.50 (10.20)
$2.66 (10.09)
|
$2.83
|
$7.04
$.38
|
-44% &
+566% &
+9%
|
|
Note: U.S. Gold is not producing
gold at this time; is it a gold exploration company, based
in Nevada. U.S. Gold is an exploration company, not a mining
company, meaning that if they strike gold, the stock should
spike and if they don’t, you could lose your investment. Very
risky.
NOTE: The mantra this year continues
to be TAKE YOUR PROFITS EARLY AND OFTEN. If you’ve made a
return of five times your investment, consider taking some
of your profits. Since gold is still in favor (in our view)
and U.S. Gold has not hit its full potential (in my view),
I’m keeping this company on the Hot News List. Profit-taking
is not the same as selling off all of the position.
Added to the S&P/TSX Global
Gold Index and S&P/TSX Global Mining Index on 9.15.09.
If you believe in this CEO and
company, you’ll want to make sure you have shares of U.S.
Gold going forward. Gold should be a great hedge against inflation,
which is predicted to become an issue once the economy starts
to rebound (2010 and forward). Right now, the Feds are still
a little concerned about deflation, but inflation could begin
on the 12-24 month horizon.
This is an exploration company,
not a mining company. They don’t produce gold at this time.
Began trading on the AMEX stock
exchange on 12.11.06. (Also trades on the Toronto Stock Exchange.)
See the feature
interview with CEO and Chairman Rob McEwen in Vol.
3, issue 2, and click to watch highlights from Natalie
Pace’s Q&A with Rob McEwen on NataliePaceDOTCOM YouTube.com
channel. You can review my
original Q&A with Rob McEwen and interview on
U.S. Gold in Vol. 4, issue 2. (Feb. 2006).
|
Recently
Deleted Companies 2008/2009:
Echelon
+20%, GE, +13% and +18%, Google, +15% and +31%, Johnson & Johnson
+10%, LDK Solar +18%, Microsoft +12%, Satcon +13%, Suntech +35%,
Trina Solar +22%, World Water & Solar +22%. Genentech (8.1.08)
+40%. Altair (deleted on 8.7.08) posted gains of +3% and +57%. Zoltek
(deleted on 8.18.08) lost 30% before being removed. LDK Solar was
deleted on 9.2.08 with 46% and 29% profits. U.S. Gold profit taking
on 11.6.08 amounted to 72% gains. Conergy gains of 51% were taken
on 11.7.08. American Superconductor posted 50% gains between 12.1
and 1.14.09. MEMC Electronics (WFR) had 21% gains between 12.1 and
12.15.08. STP had gains of 69% between 12.1.08 and 1.2.09. SQM profits
20% on 1.14.09. WWAT was deleted on 2.1.09 with -62% losses. On
2.15.09, AMSC had gains of 65%, MEMC Electronics 26%, Sociedad de
Quimica y Minera 48% and U.S. Gold 432%. Citigroup gains of 42%
on 3.15.09. Genentech was deleted on 3.15.09 with gains of 29%.
OSI Pharmaceuticals was deleted on 3.15.09 with 7% gains. Rio Tinto
was deleted on 3.27.09 with gains of 67%. On 3.27.09, the following
companies were in the money: ALTI (+48%), AMSC (+51%), eBay (+24%),
GE (+40%), HOKU (+38%), LDK (+46%), MEMC (+44%), PBW (+35%), SATC
(+42%), SQM (+76%), STP (+211%), TSL (+207%), U.S. Gold (+456%)
and WBK (+25%). Profit-taking 4.13.09: ALTI +209%,
AMSC +70%, HOKU +32%, LDK +64%, PBW +42%, SQM +42%, UXG+418%. Deleted
4.13.09: eBay, +45%, Eurox -11%, GE +47% & -56%, Google
+9%, Maxwell +25%, MEMC Electronics -33% & +49%, Microsoft +24%,
SATC +67%. STP +262% & -64%, TSL +216% & -67%, Westpac +42%
& -22%. Deleted 5.4.09: FMC Corp. with 19% gains.
PZD with losses of -39%. SPWRA with 19% gains. TREMX with 50% losses.
WSDT with losses of -59%. Deleted 5.15.09: SQM with
gains of 38% and 62%. Deleted 5.31.09: EMKR with losses
of 13% and 88% and Melco with losses of 8%. Ener1 with gains of
11% and 17%. Deleted 7.20.09: Conergy with losses of -52-98%. Deleted
Smith and Nephew on 8.15.09 with gains of 17% and losses of 28%.
Recently
Deleted from the Hot News list:
None
Stocks
to Watch
Some of these
are great companies that we’re thinking of adding to the Hot List
and some are stinkers we’re thinking of adding to the Cooling Off
List. Read carefully to identify which is which!
Note that
right now most of our favorite companies are on the Watch List,
anticipating continued weakening of the stock market, and share
prices.
Recent
Additions:
None
Recent
Deletions:
ENER1
(Symbol: HEV). Moved to Hot News List on 11.1.09.
MEMC
Electronics (WFR). Moved to Hot News list on 12.1.09.
Microsoft
(MSFT). Moved to Cooling Off list on 12.1.09.
Satcon
(Symbol: SATC). Moved to Hot News List on 11.1.09.
Sunpower
Solar (Symbol: SPWRA). Moved to Hot News List on 11.1.09.
|
Company
|
NP owns?
|
Symbol
|
Price when featured
|
Price
11.30.09
|
Year High
Year Low
|
Gains since original feature
|
|
Altair Nano-technology
|
No
|
ALTI
|
$1.16
|
$0.87
|
$2.94
$0.60
|
-25%
|
|
Read
"Life
Begins with (Li) Lithium"
Vol, 6, issue 4.
Altair was not on the list of
battery makers receiving grants from the Obama Administration.
2Q earnings on August 7, 2009:
Sales were $62,000 minus $183,000 in returned product (ugghhh).
Net loss was $6.5 million.
Cash and cash equivalents: $28
million.
|
|
Big Lots
|
No
|
BIG
|
$30.28
|
$23.14
|
$34.88
$12.40
|
-24%
|
|
Read "Discount
Designer Stores," from Vol, 5, issue
6.
|
|
Canadian Imperial Bank
RISK: Medium
|
No
|
CM
|
$65.88
|
$65.52
|
$108.79
$30.64
|
flat
|
|
Refer to the "Banking
on Iraqi Dinars"
article in volume 5, issue 2 for details. Financial markets
are under duress. Avoid most banks for now. Canada’s banks
were ranked #1 by the Milken Institute for global capital.
|
|
Citigroup
RISK: HIGH
|
No
|
C
|
$2.26
|
$4.07
|
$27.35
$.97
|
+80%
|
|
Financial markets are under duress.
Avoid most banks for now. Bailed out by the Feds November
2008. 1Q 2009 results will be released on 4.17.09 at 6:30
a.m. ET.
|
|
eBay
|
No
|
EBAY
|
$16.80
|
$24.00
|
$32.10
$9.91
|
+43%
|
|
Etail should perform better than
retail in the recession. But eBay is still having reduced
earnings. Waiting for a leveling off period.
|
|
Eldorado Gold
|
No
|
EGO
|
$10.56
|
$13.35
|
$11.39
$2.38
|
+29%
|
|
Read "Investing
in Gold"
from Vol, 6, issue 9.
|
|
First Solar
|
No
|
FSLR
|
$144.76
|
$119.15
|
$317.00
$85.28
|
-18%
|
|
See "Solar
Springs Up Again,"
article in Vol, 5, issue 4.
First Solar joined S&P500 on
10.02.09. 3Q 2009 on 10.28.09: 3Q earnings revenue was down
from 2Q by -8.5%. Investors panicked and slammed shares.
First Solar uses cadmium telluride
instead of silicon to transfer sunlight into useable energy.
This was a huge competitive advantage when silicon was hard
to get at a reasonable price. That is shifting, however, for
two reasons. Silicon manufacturing is heating up and costs
are lowering as a result, and cadmium telluride isn’t as abundant
or as efficient a power source as silicon. Read the article
for more details.
|
|
FMC Corp.
|
No
|
FMC
|
$51.36
|
$55.71
|
$80.23
$28.53
|
+8%
|
|
ADD TO HOT NEWS LIST IN Nov/Dec?
Read "Life
Begins with (Li) Lithium"
from Vol, 6, issue 4. FMC is the real winner of the stimulus
package because they supply lithium to the battery makers.
Waiting for a better buy-in point. FYI: FMC just sold $300
million in senior notes. Check with your CFP if you’re interested
in purchasing. There may be opportunities in the secondary
marketplace.
|
|
Google
|
No
|
GOOG
|
$393.69
|
$579.49
|
$602.45
$247.30
|
+47%
|
|
See Vol, 6, issue 5 for "Hulu
Your Heroes."
CEO Eric Schmidt just stepped down from the board of Apple,
Inc. Thomson Reuters said analysts expected this because Apple
and Google have begun to compete on smart phones and computer
operating systems. Note that Google’s 52-week low if $247.30
and be careful not to buy in too high.
|
|
Maxwell Labs
|
No
|
MXWL
|
$10.25
|
$16.01
|
$18.78
$4.00
|
+56%
|
|
Read "Life
Begins with (Li) Lithium"
from Vol, 6, issue 4. Increased sales by 30% this 2nd
Quarter over last year, to $24.8 million from $19 million.
Net loss for Q209 was $5.3 million, compared with $4 million
the year prior. Cash on hand = $31.5 million. It is the continuing
losses and constricted capital environment that prevents us
from putting this company on the Hot List, even though sales
are jumping. We’ll look again at the 3Q 2009, which should
occur around November 11, 2009.
|
|
PowerShares Wilderhill Clean Energy
ETF
|
No
|
PBW
|
$9.78
|
$9.92
|
$23.96
$5.78
|
Flat
|
|
Read
"The
Sunny Side"
Vol, 6, issue 3.
|
|
Rio Tinto
|
No
|
RTP
|
$180.79
|
$203.85
|
$558.65
$59.20
|
+13%
|
|
Gold, copper and other commodities
mining. Based out of UK. Mines worldwide, but focused greatly
in Australia.
|
|
Ross Stores
|
No
|
ROST
|
$35.90
|
$43.86
|
$48.58
$21.23
|
+22%
|
|
Read "Discount
Designer Stores,"
from Vol, 5, issue 6.
|
|
Sociedad Minera y Quimica de Chile
|
No
|
SQM
|
$36.36
|
$37.75
|
$59.41
$12.98
|
+4%
|
|
ADD BACK TO HOT LIST IN Nov/Dec?
Read the article, Treasure
Hunting,
in Vol, 5, issue 10 and the article "Life
Begins with (Li) Lithium,"
from Vol, 6, issue 4. SQM announced on Sept. 30, 2009 that
prices for lithium carbonate and lithium hydroxide will be
reduced by approximately 20% from current levels for the renewal
of all its supply contracts. The purpose is to accelerate
demand recovery, create incentives for research of new lithium
uses, and contribute to the sustainable long-term development
of the lithium market.
|
|
Sohu (Chinese Co. ADR)
Beijing, China
Small Cap
RISK: MEDIUM
|
No
|
SOHU
|
$46.54
|
$55.46
|
$91.50
$34.10
|
+19%
|
|
See NataliePace.com ezines, Vol.
3, issue 4 and
Vol.
2, issue 9 for
feature articles on Sohu. Dr. Charles Zhang, the Chairman
and CEO of Sohu.com, is one of our CEOs
of the year in 2007.
Read the articles in Vol.
4, issue 1. You can watch a Q&A with Dr. Charles Zhang
in an exclusive interview I did on the Forbes.com Video Network.
|
|
Suntech Power Holdings
|
No
|
STP
|
$16.06
|
$14.88
|
$49.60
$5.09
|
-4%
|
|
Read
"The
Sunny Side"
Vol, 6, issue 3. The world's largest crystalline silicon photovoltaic
(PV) module manufacturer.
Add to Hot News between now
and annual report issuance in May?
Announced 3Q 2009 on November 20,
2009 before the markets opened. Revenues were $472.1 million,
up 47.4% from last quarter. Net income was $29.8 million,
compared to $10 million in the 2nd Q of 2009.
On 9.30.09, Suntech announced the
completion and grid connection of the first 10MW utility-scale
solar power project in China. Located in Shizuishan, Ningxia
Autonomous Region, the 10MW ground mount solar system is the
first phase of a 50MW solar plant that is targeted to be completed
by 2011 in conjunction with Suntech's strategic partner, China
Energy Conservation Investment Corporation (CECIC). In addition
to supplying high quality solar modules for the system, Suntech
designed, installed and managed the development of the solar
system and holds a minority share of the project.
|
|
Trina Solar Ltd.
|
No
|
TSL
|
$17.56
|
$45.76
|
$53.50
$5.61
|
+261%
|
|
Read
"The
Sunny Side"
Vol, 6, issue 3.
|
|
Westpac
|
No
|
WBK
|
$73.54
|
$109.72
|
$122.58
$45.16
|
+49%
|
|
Issued it’s half-year "interim"
results on May 6, 2009. Go to Westpac.com.au to access.
|
|
Wisdom Tree Indian Rupee currency
ETF
|
No
|
ICN
|
$24.28
|
$25.19
|
$25.71
$20.42
|
+5%
|
|
Read the article, "Banking
on Iraqi Dinars,"
from Vol, 5, issue 2.
|
Cooling
Off Stocks List (may be Poised for a Decline in Share Price).
Note:
The companies listed in bold have recently been added to this cooling
off list and/or may be currently poised for a decline in value.
Investors who have them in their portfolio should read the recent
news and consider whether it is time to sell and take profits, dump
losses, short the position and/or simply weather the storms, while
keeping the company in their long-term portfolio. At any rate, always
consult your certified financial partner before making adjustments
to your portfolio. (Again, note that the stocks on this chart are
expected to go DOWN in price.)
Highlighted
Companies (Cooling Off List):
Microsoft
(MSFT)
Yahoo (YHOO)
DELETIONS:
KB Home
(KBH)
Toll
Brothers (TOL)
|
Company
|
NP owns?
|
Symbol
|
Price when added to Cooling
Off List
|
Price 11.30.09
|
52-week High
52-week Low
|
Gains/Loss
|
|
American Express
|
Yes
|
AXP
|
$16.98
$41.56
(11.16.09)
|
$41.46
|
$52.63
$14.72
|
+245%
|
|
Read the article "American
Express,"
from Vol, 6, issue 2. Earnings on 10.22.09: Income was down
25%. To $642 million from $861 million a year ago. $19 billion
in cash on hand. Debt is $55 billion ($53 long; $2 billion
"short term"), with $27 billion in "other liabilities."
Customer deposits are $24 billion.
|
|
Apple Computer
|
No
|
AAPL
|
$132.07
$190.47 (11.16.09)
|
$199.96
|
$192.24
$78.20
|
+51% &
+5%
|
|
See archived ezine Vol, 4, issue
2, for the feature article, "Apple
Chips."
4Q 2009 earnings on 10.19.09 were
amazing: posted revenue of $9.87 billion and a net quarterly
profit of $1.67 billion, or $1.82 per diluted share. These
results compare to revenue of $7.9 billion and net quarterly
profit of $1.14 billion, or $1.26 per diluted share, in the
year-ago quarter. Gross margin was 36.6 percent, up from 34.7
percent in the year-ago quarter. International sales accounted
for 46 percent of the quarter’s revenue.
Apple sold 3.05 million
Macintosh® computers during the quarter, representing
a 17 percent unit increase over the year-ago quarter. The
Company sold 10.2 million iPods during the quarter, representing
an eight percent unit decline from the year-ago quarter. Apple
sold 7.4 million iPhones in the quarter, representing seven
percent unit growth over the year-ago quarter.
"We are thrilled
to have sold more Macs and iPhones than in any previous quarter,"
said Steve Jobs, Apple’s CEO, in the earnings press release.
"We’ve got a very strong lineup for the holiday season
and some really great new products in the pipeline for 2010."
Dr. Eric Schmidt, CEO, Google,
resigned from Apple’s board on August 3, 2009. According to
Steve Jobs, it’s because Google’s new products pose a conflict
of interest with Apple’s core biz. No surprise here. It was
expected.
On September 15, 2009, Bruce Sewell,
formerly senior vice president and general counsel of Intel
Corporation, because SVP and general counsel, replaced Daniel
Cooperman, who had the job for the last two years. Cooperman’s
departure at this time seems to be slightly more troublesome,
given that he would have been actively involved in the decision
to keep the extent of Jobs’ illness from investors (whether
he opposed or supported it).
Steve Jobs today (go to GettyImages.com
to see him speaking on Sept. 9, 2009) looks like the grandfather
of his photo on the Apple website. Apple products are amazing
and Tim Cooks, Jobs’ commander in chief, seems to do a fantastic
job. But Steve is the face and soul of Apple – especially
in investors’ eyes.
Insider selling is over $90 million
since June 2009 (after Jobs announced his liver transplant).
|
|
Applied Materials
|
No
|
AMAT
|
$12.76
$13.51 (9.15.09)
|
$12.23
|
$14.19
$7.17
|
-4% &
-9%
|
|
Leadership, product line and recessionary
actions were strong, but AMAT transitioned to solar just when
sales dropped off. Weathering the storm is imperative in the
meantime. Investors should be aware of the high P/Es of this
company, which is hard to justify in a contracting environment.
With almost $2 billion in cash and marketable securities,
AMAT is in a position to regroup and recover in the future.
With any luck and with the purported US emphasis on clean
energy (which has yet to see real funding), this is a temporary
setback.
3Q loss (released on 8.11.09) was
$55 million on $1.13 billion of net sales. "In a difficult
environment, Applied improved its operating performance and
generated significant cash flow while making substantial investments
in new technologies for next-generation semiconductor chips,
flat panel displays and solar panels," said Mike Splinter,
chairman and CEO.
|
|
Baidu
|
No
|
BIDU
|
$183.15
$483.60
(11.16.09)
|
$430.59
|
$397.70
$100.50
|
+235% &
-11%
|
|
Leading Chinese website for search
(similar to Google). 85 P/E is high for a revenue stream so
tied to advertising (during a global recession). (Advertising
revenue models tend to suffer greatly in recessions and Google’s
P/E is only 30, by comparison, right now.)
7.27.09 1Q 2009 earnings: According
to the company, "Our operations are primarily based in
China, where we derive substantially all of our revenues.
Total revenues in 2008 were RMB3.2 billion (US$468.8 million),
an 83.3% increase over 2007. Operating profit in 2008 was
RMB1.1 billion (US$160.8 million), a 100.4% increase over
2007. Net income in 2008 was RMB1.0 billion (US$153.6 million),
a 66.6% increase over 2007."
The primary Risk Factor for Baidu
is: We derive revenues primarily from online marketing services,
which accounted for 98.9%, 99.8% and 99.9% of our total revenues
in 2006, 2007 and 2008, respectively.
|
|
Berkshire Hathaway
|
No
|
BRK.A
|
$97,000
$102,105 (8.13.09)
|
$100,155
|
$147,000
$70,050
|
+3% &
-9%
|
|
Read "The
Oracle Turns 80,"
in Vol, 6, issue 8..
|
|
Capital One Financial
|
No
|
COF
|
$22.29
$37.98 (9.15.09)
|
$37.74
|
$63.50
$7.80
|
+69% &
-1%
|
|
Credit card companies are under
distress. And now, the Obama Administration is setting up
a Bill of Rights for their customer. Tough times for the credit
industry continue, and this company is really experiencing
some of the toughest challenges of the field.
3Q 2009 earnings on 10.22.09: Managed
revenue increased $482.0 million, or 11.6 percent, relative
to the second quarter.
· Provision expense increased $296.4
million, due to an anticipated increase in charge-offs as
well as a modest allowance build of $31.7 million in the third
quarter.
"We've worked for years to position
our company to be resilient, and our third quarter results
demonstrate that resiliency in the midst of the most challenging
economic cycle we've seen in generations," said Richard D.
Fairbank, Capital One's Chairman and Chief Executive Officer.
"We are successfully weathering the storm, but the storm is
not over. Therefore, we will continue to take the decisive
actions necessary to place our company in the best position
to navigate the downturn and drive shareholder value over
the cycle."
Cash and cash equivalents were
$4.1 billion, down from $4.8 billion (2Q 2009) and down from
$7.5 billion at the end of 2008.
According to the annual earnings
report. "The adoption of SFAS 166 and SFAS 167 could
have a significant impact on the Company’s consolidated financial
statements because the Company expects it will be required
to consolidate at least some of its special purpose entities
to which pools of loan receivables have been transferred in
transactions previously qualifying as sales. Holding more
of these assets on the Company’s balance sheet may require
it to take various actions, including raising additional capital,
in order to meet regulatory capital requirements. Such capital
may not be available on terms favorable to the Company, if
at all, and could have a negative impact on the Company’s
financial results. As of June 30, 2009, the Company had
approximately $44.5 billion of credit card receivables held
by QSPEs."
Read the article "American
Express,"
from Vol, 6, issue 2.
|
|
Fortress Investment Group
|
No
|
FIG
|
$3.57
$5.37 (8.13.09)
|
$3.96
|
$19.50
$0.77
|
+11% &
-26%
|
|
Released 3Q 2009 results on November
6, 2009. GAAP net income, excluding principal’s agreement
compensation, of $50 million. GAAP net loss of $190 million
(due to the principals taking $140 million this quarter) even
though FIG has lost 310 million this year…
Daniel H. Mudd, currently member
of the Fortress board of directors, will become the firm's
new CEO effective August 11, 2009. George W. Wellde has been
elected to Fortress' Board of Directors.
Read the articles, "Cherry
Picking the Cherry Bombs"
(Vol. 5, issue 12) and "Money
Grows on Wisdom Trees,"
from Vol. 4, issue 3. Reported earnings on 3.15.09. FY 2008
GAAP net loss of GAAP net loss of $322 million. Principals
in the company earned $222 million of that net loss.
2Q2009 earnings on 8.09: Net los
of -$171 million. Without paying the principals in the company,
the net income would have been $66 million. Man these guys
are getting paid a lot to lose a lot of dough!
On 9.22.09: dividend was canceled
by Board.
|
|
Intel
RISK: LOW
|
No
|
INTC
|
$16.66
$20.25 (9.1.09)
|
$19.09
|
$25.29
$12.06
|
+15% &
-6%
|
|
Intel is a great blue chip. However,
business spending fell off a cliff in the recession. A P/E
of 42 is too high if the recession continues.
Green: Intel and Google launched
ClimateSaversComputing.org in 2007, with a goal of achieving
a 50% power consumption reduction by 2010. They have convinced
all kinds of partners to come on board, including competitors:
Advanced Micro Devices and Microsoft!
Reported 2Q results on 7.14.09:
had non-GAAP operating income of $1.4 billion, net income
of $1.0 billion and EPS of 18 cents. On a GAAP-basis, the
company reported an operating loss of $12 million, a net loss
of $398 million and a loss per share of 7 cents.
"Intel’s second-quarter results
reflect improving conditions in the PC market segment with
our strongest first- to second-quarter growth since 1988 and
a clear expectation for a seasonally stronger second half,"
said Paul Otellini, Intel president and CEO. "Intel's
strategy of investing in new technologies and innovative products,
combined with ongoing focus on operating efficiencies, continues
to yield benefits that are evident in our strengthening financial
performance."
|
|
Medtronic
|
No
|
MDT
|
$33.35
$37.09
(9.15.09)
|
$42.43
|
$56.97
$24.06
|
+27% &
+14%
|
|
Medtronic’s Infuse Bone Graft product
has been at the center of the debate of some controversial
deaths, and has investigated by a Congressional Panel, the
Justice Department, the SEC and other national, state and
local governance officials for issues related to the use of
this product and others. Read the earnings report for a complete
list of the complaints and current status. The company reports
that on August 21, 2009, the Department of Justice decided
not to intervene at this time but may intervene at any time
for good cause based upon a Court Order entered on August
28, 2009.
On 5.19.09, the company issued
a press release, saying: "For fiscal year 2010, the company
expects revenue growth in the range of 5-8 percent on a constant
currency basis. The company also expects diluted earnings
per share (EPS) in the range of $3.10 to $3.20, which reflects
EPS growth in the range of 8-12 percent after adjusting for
approximately 6-7 cents of earnings dilution from the recent
acquisitions of CryoCath, Ablation Frontiers, Ventor, and
CoreValve."
"Earnings per share estimates
exclude the effect of any special or extraordinary charges
that may impact the company’s continuing operations and do
not include the impact of the new accounting method for recognizing
non-cash interest expense on convertible debt."
|
|
MGM Mirage
|
No
|
MGM
|
$26.79
|
$10.43
|
$100.50
$5.10
|
-61%
|
|
Get more information in Vol. 5,
issue 10 in the "(No)
Viva Las Vegas"
article.
The City Center project looms as
exceedingly problematic in today’s vast downturn of real estate
in the Las Vegas area. Anticipating very bad news on this
project in the near future. MGM has kept itself alive in the
harshest climate of the new millennium through selling assets,
selling more stock and taken on more debt. All of the debt
receives a junk rating from Fitch. On October 1, 2009, they
had to cancel a debt exchange offer due to low interest from
debt-holders.
Earnings on 11.5.09: Net revenue
decreased 9% to $1.5 billion. Net loss was $133 million. Debt
at the end of the quarter was $12.5 billion.
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Microsoft
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No
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MSFT
|
$29.64
|
$29.64
|
$30.53
$14.87
|
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Read "AOL:
From LOL to OMG"
from Vol, 6, issue 12 to review the Stock Report Card on Microsoft
from December 2009.
Great
blue chip (certainly better than Citigroup, Bank of America,
AIG and GM were), if you buy at the right price. But revenue
is off. Q1 2010 earnings report (on 10.23.09): Windows Revenue
is off by 39%, down to $2,620 million from $4,278 in 2008
1st Q. Operating income is off 52%, down to $1,463
from $3,059 a year ago… Nintendo’s WII is the gaming device
of choice (and X-Box shipments were down to 2.1 million, from
2.2 million). "Nongaming" entertainment revenue
is reportedly off by 14% ($98 million). What’s nongaming entertainment?
Remember Zune? Well, that is one of the "PC hardware
products" that is decreasing in sales. (Did it ever sell
at all?) You get the picture. When revenue is down by 14%
across the board, and the strongest season – holidays – are
predicted to limp along and favor the competition (WII), and
anti-trust law suits are still being battled, best not to
buy Microsoft at its 52-week high.
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Sears Holding
|
Yes
|
SHLD
|
$52.93
$78.37 (8.13.09)
|
$70.58
|
$108.75
$26.80
|
+33% &
-10%
|
|
Read the articles, "Cherry
Picking the Cherry Bombs"
(Vol. 5, issue 12) and the "Discount
Designer Stores"
article (Vol. 5, issue 6).
Sears is one of the largest, oldest retail chains in the U.S,
and formerly, was as American as baseball and apple pie. These
days, however, Sears is more of a hedge fund, which might
help to explain why you’ve been trying to get that appliance
repaired (under warranty) for months or been waiting for a
replacement for your coffee pot for so long that you’ve taken
up drinking tea. Almost all of the board directors at Sears
are in the investment business, not the retail business. In
fact, board director Emily Scott, a TV station founder, is
the only person on the board without significant investment
experience. No one on the Sears board has any experience at
all in retail.
You can read the shareholders
letter from Chairman Eddie Lampert on the SearsHoldings.com
website. 10 minutes into the letter, and I have to call this
a rant. Big red flag folks.
Still don’t have a CEO. Bruce Johnson
is interim CEO. New CFO started last October, right before
the preparation of the annual report began. The former CFO
Miles Reidy decided that he needed to spend more time with
his family than to put is name on the 2008 annual report.
Another big red flag.
Consensus, colossal insider
selling to the tune of over $80 million, including warrants
that were exercised by interim CEO Bruce Johnson.
3Q 2009 earnings on 11.19.09: Net
loss was $127 million. Total revenues decreased $470 million
to $10.2 billion for the 13 weeks ended October 31, 2009,
as compared to total revenues of $10.7 billion for the 13
weeks ended November 1, 2008. Total debt (consisting of short-term
borrowings, long-term debt and capital lease obligations)
at November 11, 2009 was $3.8 billion, as compared to $3.2
billion (8.09). Cash on hand is $1.5 billion. Short -term
borrowings are $1.6 billion.
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Taubman Centers REIT
|
No
|
TCO
|
$24.74
$33.81 (9.15.09)
|
$33.87
|
$65.99
$12.43
|
+38% & flat
|
|
Read the article, "Global
Recession,"
from Vol. 6, issue 6
in June 2009.
The income reported on July 23,
2009 was actually "cancellation income," not rent.
Read the details, not just the numbers.
"The environment for retail real
estate continues to be challenging," said Robert S. Taubman,
chairman, president and chief executive officer of Taubman
Centers. "Lease cancellation income from our tenants offset
a decline in rents. In addition, we are very focused on costs
throughout our organization, which contributed to our results
during the quarter."
3Q 2009 earnings on 10.26.09: Net
income (loss) allocable to common shareholders per diluted
share (EPS) was $(1.77) for the quarter ended September 30,
2009, versus $0.17 for the quarter ended September 30, 2008.
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Time Warner
|
No
|
TWX
|
$24.44
|
$30.71
|
$50.70
$17.81
|
+26%
|
|
Read “AOL:
From LOL to OMG”
from Vol. 6, issue 12 to review the Stock Report Card on Yahoo
from December 2009.
|
|
Wells Fargo
|
Yes
|
WFC
|
$20.05
$29.21
(10.15.09)
|
$27.76
|
$44.69
$7.80
|
+38% &
-5%
|
|
See "Wells
Fargo’s Incredible Exploding Earnings"
in Vol. 5, issue 9, and "Wells
Fargo’s Great Depression,"
in Vol. 4, issue 12.
Announces 3Q earnings on Oct 21, 2009 at 5:00 a.m. PT (before
market open).
3Q 2009 on 10.21.09: 3rd consecutive
quarter of record earnings -
Record Wells Fargo net income of $3.2 billion, up 98 percent
from last year; $9.5 billion year to date,
up 75 percent from last year.
Generated $20 billion during the
past six months toward the $13.7 billion Supervisory Capital
Assessment Program (SCAP)
buffer requirement; PTPP tracking above Company’s internal
SCAP estimates and 35 percent
above supervisory adverse scenario estimate -
Credit reserves built by $1.0 billion ($3.0 billion year to
date), reaching $24.5 billion, or 3.07
percent of total loans and 118 percent of nonaccrual loans
Earnings releases from Wells Fargo
are no longer mass distributed. They are available on the
company’s website at:
https://www.wellsfargo.com/invest_relations/earnings
13,000 team members are working
on helping customers stay in their homes and Wells reports
that their "delinquency and foreclosure rates continue
to be well below the industry average."
Wells Fargo Chairman takes early
retirement: Dick Kovacevich
will step down as chairman and a director at the end of 2009
and retire from the Company in early 2010.
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Wynn Resorts
|
No
|
WYNN
|
$95.42
|
$63.85
|
$176.14
$18.06
|
-33%
|
|
Check out the article,
"(No)
Viva Las Vegas"
in Vol, 5, issue 10.
2Q 2009 results announced on 7.30.2009.
Net revenues for the second quarter of 2009 were $723.3 million,
compared to $825.2 million in the second quarter of 2008.
Net income for the quarter was $25.5 million, or $0.21 per
diluted share, compared to net income of $272.0 million, or
$2.42 per diluted share in 2008. Adjusted net income in the
second quarter of 2009 was $11.5 million, or $0.09 per diluted
share (adjusted EPS)(2) compared to an adjusted net income
of $124.3 million, or $1.11 per diluted share in the second
quarter of 2008.
Total cash balances on June 30,
2009 were $1.1 billion. Total debt outstanding at the end
of the quarter was $4.1 billion, including approximately $2.6
billion of Wynn Las Vegas debt and $1.5 billion of Wynn Macau
debt.
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|
Yahoo
|
No
|
YHOO
|
$15.00
|
$15.00
|
$18.02
$9.42
|
--
|
|
Read "AOL:
From LOL to OMG"
from Vol, 6, issue 12 to review the Stock Report Card on Microsoft
from December 2009.
Revenue
is off 12%. Price to earnings ratio is still the highest in
the space, at 32 on 11.30.09.
|
Recently
Deleted in 2008/2009:
Fannie Mae was
deleted on 2.11.08 after losing -50% and -56% of its share price
value, and then again on 7.1.08, after losing another -40%. (Both
puts more than doubled.) Novastar Financial (NFI) was deleted on
6.2.08 with -95% share price implosion. Sears Holding Corp. was
deleted on 7.1.08 with 64% gains on the put option. Wells Fargo
was deleted on 7.1.08 with 83% gains on the put. Apple was deleted
on 8.1.08 with 35% gains on the put. The Google put, deleted on
8.1.08, was another great performer, with over 50% gains. First
Solar had gains of over 32-34%. Mentor was deleted on 9.30.08 with
75% gains on the put option (-17% on the share price); Medicis was
deleted with gains of over 37% on the share price (down direction).
Boston Properties, Las Vegas Sands and Macerich were deleted on
10.9.08 with gains of 16-30%, 66% and 28-42% respectively. Wells
Fargo was deleted on 11.6.08 with 35-50% gains on the put and again
on 12.1.08 for 50-70% gains. American Express posted 35% gains in
just 30 days, between 2.1.09 and 3.2.09. First Solar was deleted
on 8.13.09 with 33% gains. KB Home with 74% gains and Toll Brothers
with 51% gains on 10.01.09.
IMPORTANT
DISCLAIMER (PLEASE READ):
Please note:
NataliePace.com does not act or operate like a broker. We report
on financial news, and are one of the most trusted independently
owned and operated financial news corporations in the U.S. 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 consult an experienced, reputable financial
professional before buying or selling any security, and consider
your long-term goals and strategies.
Investors
should NOT be using the Hot News on Cool Stocks list or the Cooling
Off list to trade their nest eggs. Your retirement plan should
reflect a long, safe strategy, which has been designed with the
assistance of a financial professional who is familiar with your
goals, risk tolerance, tax needs and more. The "trading"
portion of your portfolio should be a very small part of your investment
strategy, and the amount of money you invest into individual companies
should never be greater than your experience, wisdom, knowledge
and patience.
IMPORTANT
DISCLAIMER: Information has been obtained from sources believed
to be reliable however NataliePace.com 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.
|
NataliePace.com Calendar:
The
#1 Gift of the Holiday Season Is Just $10 and Can Be Delivered Right
to Their Door!
The NataliePace.com Calendar section features conferences, teleconferences,
retreats, educational opportunities, cultural events, galas, market
events and online chats with executives and VIPs. Stay plugged in!
We add online chats, article updates, teleconferences, etc. as they
are booked, so be sure to visit the calendar section early and often.
Below is only a partial listing of what’s happening this month.
See below for
just a few of the amazing educational and networking opportunities
that world-class organizations are offering for you. To access links
to the event website and registration, go to the Calendar
section at NataliePace.com.
Partnering
for Cures Meeting, NYC
Tuesday,
December 1st, 2009
Expediting cures for prostate cancer requires collaboration. Partnering
for Cures, a first-of-its-kind meeting will be held December 1-3,
2009 in New York City. This meeting will facilitate collaborations
by bringing together philanthropy, medical research foundations,
and the biotechnology community.
Easy
Green Tips
Wednesday,
December 2nd, 2009
9:00AM through 9:30AM PT
Want to go green, but need a few more tips? Green T Tamara joins
Natalie Pace on BlogTalkRadio.com. Share your wisdom on simple ways
to a greener, cleaner life. On BlogTalkRadio.com/NataliePace.
Wednesday,
December 9th, 2009
9:00AM through 9:30AM (PT. Health is Wealth for Women.)
Tips for preventing breast cancer with HealthWalk specialist Dr.
Anna Walden. On BlogTalkRadio.com/NataliePace.
Renee
Fleming at LA Opera
Saturday,
December 12th, 2009
Thrill to the sheer beauty of opera diva Renée Fleming's
voluptuous soprano voice.
FOMC
Meeting
Tuesday,
December 15th, 2009
The Federal Reserve Board meets to set policy intended to stimulate
the American economy without stimulating inflation.
GDP
3Q 2009 (Final)
Tuesday,
December 22nd, 2009
8:30AM ET.
The U.S. Dept. of Commerce, Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA.gov)
releases its final report on GDP growth in the 3rd quarter of 2009.
Final numbers for 2Q were -0.7%. 1Q GDP came in at -5.5%.
Agape
New Year’s Meditation Retreat, Joshua Tree, CA
Tuesday,
December 29th, 2009
With Michael Bernard Beckwith and musical artist Rickie Byars Beckwith.
Letting go of the past and greeting the New Year in silence is a
tradition at Agape. Imagine this magical retreat in the beautiful
setting of Joshua Tree!
Clinton
Global Initiative University
Conference, Miami, FL
Friday, April 16-18, 2010
This 3-day event is one where students work hand-in-hand on global
issues, and even get their hands dirty on a community service project.
Of course, doing this alongside Prez. Clinton and a few celebrity
friends, like Brad Pitt, doesn't hurt! You must apply with a proposal
to be accepted. Act fast!
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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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