TO
ACCESS A PRINTABLE COPY OF THIS NEWSLETTER CLICK HERE.

Vol. 8 Issue 2, February 1st, 2011
Send comments and suggestions or get more information
at info@NataliePace.com
QUOTE OF THE MONTH:
"China is one of the top markets for American exports... Our exports
to China are growing nearly twice as fast as our exports to the
rest of the world, making it a key part of my goal of doubling
American exports and keeping America competitive in the 21st century."
President
Barack Obama
Speaking on January 19, 2011 during Chinese President Hu's visit
to Washington D.C .
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| From left
to right - Dr. Eric Schmidt (exec. chairman), Larry Page (CEO
& co-founder) and Sergey Brin (co-founder) in a self-driving
car. |
Big Bites
Out of Apple and Google: Losing Their CEOs.
by Natalie
Pace.
Includes
NASDAQ
and Dow
Stock Report Cards.
Holy Technology.
Who would have thought that Google and Apple could lose their CEOs
at the same time and NASDAQ wouldn’t crash as a result? As if coordinated,
Google and Apple announced the executive shakeups on January 20
and January 17 (respectively) right before excellent earnings. NASDAQ
staggered in the wake of the news, while the Dow Jones Industrial
Average charged forward and crashed through the 12,000 ceiling.
There was not the panic or headlines that executive suite changes
of that gravity would normally have generated.
However, that
doesn’t mean that investors won’t pullback gradually as the gravity
of these changes becomes more apparent. It’s important to examine
what exactly we’re eating before we continue to take big bites out
of the newly revamped Apple and Google. The big question is, "Can
these companies run just as well without their extraordinary, visionary
leaders – Steve Jobs and Dr. Eric Schmidt -- as they did under their
masterful guidance?"
At a market
capitalization of $317 billion and $191 billion, Apple and Google,
respectively, have become the new American Blue Chip companies.
With year over year earnings growth of 71% (Apple) and 26% (Google),
both are unique gargantuan companies, in that they are still leading
the race on the Big Boards for revenue growth. It is clear that
the hand dealt from Dr. Eric Schmidt to Larry Page (Google’s new
CEO and co-founder) and Steve Jobs to Tim Cook (Apple’s COO who
is handling day-to-day operations while Steve Jobs is on medical
leave of absence) is a winner. This becomes even more pronounced
when you measure up the earnings stagnation (or retreat), the legacy
concerns and debt burdens of many of the Dow Jones Industrial Average
component corporations in the hundred billion dollar market cap
range.
There continues
to be a growing discrepancy with the new Blue Chips and the former
leading Blue Chip Index, which I now refer to as the Bailout Index
– where more bailouts are listed than is healthy for your fiscal
fitness. The new Blue Chips -- Apple, Google, Oracle, Cisco, Microsoft
and Amazon and more -- all boast double digit revenue growth, year
over year. Google and Apple have no debt, with billions of cash
coming in each month. Google has $33 billion in cash and short-term
securities on hand, while Apple has $27 billion on hand. Click to
review the Technology
Large Cap Stock Report Card.
On the other
hand, almost one third of the Dow Jones Industrial Average components,
9 out of 30 companies, owe more than they are worth. 6 out of 30
(1/5) have debt three times or more than the market value of the
corporation. Of those nine with excessive debt, four are earning
less this year than last year, and only four have earnings that
increased more than 10%. Caterpillar’s earnings are up 53%, due
to economic growth in the developing world and improvement from
low levels of machine demand in 2009 in developed countries. However,
Boeing, General Electric, Bank of America, Verizon and IBM are still
experiencing stalled or negative earnings trends. Click here to
review the Dow
Jones Industrial Average Components Stock Report Card.
We hear about
public debt all over the news these days, but the corporate debt
is as big of a concern. The airline and auto manufacturing industries
have all suffered multiple corporate bankruptcies, but in truth
any corporation with a defined benefit plan and three or fewer workers
supporting each retiree is under a burden far heavier than the newer,
leaner corporations, like Apple and Google, where employees manage
their own retirements. According to Deven
Sharma, the president of Standard & Poor's, "More
than [one trillion] of US non-financial corporate bonds and loans
falling due [between now and 2015] are rated subinvestment grade."
Subinvestment grade means junk bond status, as in high risk. Sharma
published his concerns about corporate debt in an Op-Ed published
by the Financial Times on January 26, 2011.
When you combine
stalled sales with excessive debt and crushing pension and other
post-employment benefit obligations, you have a CEO who has to be
as distracted with keeping bondholders and unions happy, and raising
new capital to say afloat as s/he is with innovation and out-performing
the competition. Fortunately, Tim Cook and Larry Page start off
with a competitive edge over their peers. With no debt, employees
managing their own 401Ks and billions in excess capital, these chief
executives can focus almost entirely on competing and innovating
and have the capital on hand to purchase smaller companies before
they become a threat.
Having said
that, if I were to bet on which company (and leader) will win the
Gold Medal in 2011 and going forward, I’d have to lay odds on Tim
Cook and Apple. Tim Cook has already proven multiple times during
many Steve Jobs medical leaves over the years, that he is capable
of fueling the innovation that underscores Apple’s extraordinary
lead in phone, personal music, computers and customer loyalty. Apple
stores are humming with more activity than the local bar scene.
And with earnings growth of 71% year over year, that is two and
a half times the momentum that Google had in the last quarter (at
26% earnings growth).
The name of
the game in all investing is picking the winner and then purchasing
the asset at a great price. While 2011 is poised to be an excellent
year in the stock markets, the volatility of the past decade means
that patient buyers quite often see the buy-in they most desire.
I’d bite Apple at a lower price -- in the $260/share range. And
I’d underweight Google until newbie CEO Larry Page proves that he
is indeed ready to lead. (It didn’t work out so well for founding
CEO Jerry Yang, after the handoff from Terry Semel.)
For ongoing
coverage of these two new Blue Chip companies, including more attractive
buy-in and profit-taking points, be sure to read the Hot News on
Cool Stocks updates, on or around the 1st and 15th
of each month.
Read Dr.
Eric Schmidt’s blog on the changes, as well as Steve
Jobs' press release by clicking on their names.
About
Natalie Pace:
Natalie
Pace is the author of You
Vs. Wall Street and host of the Pace and Prosperity radio
show on BlogTalkRadio.com/NataliePace.
She is a repeat guest on Fox News, CNBC, ABC-TV and a contributor
to HuffingtonPost.com, Forbes.com, Sohu.com and BestEverYou.com.
As a philanthropist, she has helped to raise more than two million
for Los Angeles public schools and financial literacy. Follow her
on http://www.facebook.com/pages/NWPace,
and on YouTube.com/NataliePaceDOTCOM.
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 all
in on any asset class or individual stocks. 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.
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.
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France!
- The Perfect Valentine’s Day Rendezvous.
by Natalie
Pace.
Includes
Travel Tips for a Royal Experience on a Commoner’s Budget.
It’s no accident
that the French look like they are kissing when they speak. When
it comes to romance, nothing beats le francais. The food! The clothes!
The scandalous history! (The guillotine. Beheading King Louis XVI
and Queen Marie Antoinette and then, less than 100 years later,
crowning Napoleon as Emperor... Crowning Carla Bruni, Mick Jaggar’s
former girlfriend, as First Lady... Ahhh the intrigue continues
over the centuries...)
Below are the
Best Experiences of Paris, Versailles and Nice and 10 Tips to make
your French experience more rich, more fun, romantic, deep and affordable.
You can get the mainstay stuff – Champs Elysee, Museum Invalides,
casinos in Monte Carlo -- from any travel book. The tips below don’t
just give you the tourist gawk moment at the monuments. They allow
you to go behind the scenes and experience a taste of the royal
in each.
Voila! The
Best of France!
Best of Paris...
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1. The
Towers of Notre Dame. A trip to Notre Dame can be a full
day on its own, especially if you include (and you should) a
tour of the Towers. There, on the rooftops, you’ll gaze face-to-face
with the gargoyles and angels and be within hands-reach of the
famous bell. |
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2. Mass
at St. Germaine des Pres. Why not experience a ritual at
one of the world’s oldest and most famous cathedrals (which
was built in the 6th century)? |
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3. Paul.
Exceptional patisserie and boulangerie and cafe, with locations
all over France. Treat yourself to café au lait, hot
chocolate, chocolate croissants, raspberry nougat cakes, delightful
canale (exquisite, petite pastry), quick sandwiches or a meal.
Because many French restaurants close between 2 and 7 p.m.,
it is a good idea to have a jambon au frommage sandwich handy,
in case you are late to lunch and can’t wait for dinner. Paul
is just the place! |
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4. Le
Derniere Goutte and Fish. If you agree that Life Should
be Delicious™ like Cosi (in NYC), then you’ll love the
founder’s restaurant and wine shop in Paris, in arrondisement
6 (near St. Germaine des Pres). Fish is 69, rue de Seine, and
Le Derniere Goutte is 6, rue Bourbon le Chateau. Only estate
wines here, with owners who speak English and host frequent
wine tastings. |
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5. Le
Louvre. Go see Mona Lisa first thing. Do not dally and visit
other paintings along the way. Just go straight to the masterpiece,
elbow your way to the front and get this done. Once that is
over (and if you go early enough, perhaps you can enjoy the
front position for as long as you desire), then enjoy whatever
else you are most passionate about seeing in the Louvre’s extensive
collection. The museum is too large to experience everything
in one day. But if you arrive early, visit Mona Lisa right away
and pause for lunch in the café, chances are you’ll be
able to get in the essentials. You can get lost in le Louvre
for days, but if you only have a few days or a week in Paris,
then there are other things you MUST do, too, including Versailles.
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Best
of Versailles
Day
trip from Paris to Versailles... (20-minute train ride each way)
The train
ride to Versailles (Versailles-Rive Gauche) from
Paris is relatively brief, inexpensive and easy. Click for detailed
directions.
Most travel
books will say that you should allow at least half a day in Versailles.
What a waste! In truth, you may wish to book one night in Versailles,
so that you can experience the Palace, the town and an once-in-a-lifetime
royal event.
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1. Trianon
Palace is the Waldorf=Astoria Hotel in Versailles. The
hotel is currently offering $165 euro/night, including breakfast,
so don’t just assume this world-class hotel is out of the budget
(especially considering that Versailles is indeed a once-in-a-lifetime
experience). There is enough to do with the Chateau Versailles,
Marie Antoinette’s Petite Trianon, the arts and the shopping
to justify staying in Versailles two nights. |
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The
Royal Chapel at Versailles Palace
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2.
The
Royal Opera House at Versailles.
Experience Opera, ballet and other fabulous events at the Royal
Opera House at Versailles. What amazed me initially was that
you could sit in the same opera house as Marie Antoinette once
did and experience world-class ballet (Bolshoi), opera and more.
And then I was floored by the price, which is far less expensive
than a seat at the opera in Los Angeles or New York. This is
an experience to plan your trip to France around. So, click
and view upcoming events. The 2011 season runs now through July.
Highlights of the 2011 season include John Malkovich playing
Casanova during the Venice Carnival week, July 3-5, 2011. |
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3. Au
Chapeau Gris
for lunch or dinner, except on Tuesday evening and Wednesdays.
If you stay at Trianon Palace (or even if you don’t), chances
are you’ll be directed to dine at Gordon Ramsay’s restaurant.
For a more moderately priced authentic French meal, don’t miss
Au Chapeau Gris. The ambiance is intimate and slightly upscale.
The staff is delightful – attentive, efficient and friendly.
The food is delicious. And the presentation is hilarious! For
a thrill, someone at the table must order the lobster (quite
good)... |
Best
of the South of France
Jaunt
down to Nice-Ville... (second leg of your journey; 5-½ hour train
ride or one-hour flight)
The
train ride to Nice is a must-do trip in itself, but not one you
need to experience twice, especially since the flight (to Paris
or any other major European city) will be cheaper and faster.
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1. Hotel
of the Century: Hotel
Negresco in Nice, France. Read the article in this ezine
for more details. If you’re planning a trip to Nice, France
or Monte Carlo, this is the place to stay. |
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2.
Gourmet
Food:
Michelin-awarded chef Jean-Denis Rieubland at Le Chantecler
and his bistro at La Rotonde
(located at Le Negresco). You’ll love Le Chantecler for date
night, and La Rotonde for fun and/or the family. (There is a
fun carousel that will keep the kids thrilled during the meal.)
Chef Rieubland lives by the maxim that fresh ingredients and
creativity equal success. They also delight the palate. |
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3. Old
Nice:
Explore the fresh produce markets (daily) and beaucoup restaurants.
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4. Rue
de France and Blvd. Massena:
Shopping (clothes), but not eating, on Rue de France and Blvd.
Massena. This is the tourist promenade. You’ll find better food
in Old Nice, but the bargains for quality clothing will amaze
you, especially considering this street is only one away from
Promenade des Anglais (the street that runs along the shoreline)...
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5. Ma
Nolan’s.
For soccer and a pint, and/or a burger and/or to parlez Anglais.
It’s hard to put the word excellent next to Irish pub food,
but if you’re dying for a burger and fries (chips), this is
the place to go. And you can order in English! |
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6. Oliviera.
Sample olive oil, drink wine and have a meal. You can get a
better meal in Nice (but not a better priced meal), but
you will never find more exquisite olive oil. The passion these
gourmands have for olive oil will win you over to even try drizzling
olive oil on your tiramisu! |
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7. Best
Cheap, but Good, with Continuing Service:
Royal Kebab. Cheap, fresh, with continuing service, you’ll find
that kebab of any stripe is your friend in Nice, France. Vegetarians
can opt for hummus, tabouleh, baba ganoush, etc. The kebab fare,
in general, is great to grab if you are hungry in the late afternoon
(or late at night). However, Royal Kebab is definitely more
divine than the run-of-the-mill street fare. I recommend the
moussaka, served with bulghar and salad. Yummy! 4 Rue Saint
François 06300 NICE. |
Below
are 10 Tips to make your trip to France extra special and more seamless...
Things
to do (in general)...
- Buy a pair
of French walking boots and walk everywhere. That way you’ll burn
off all of those extra pastries and bread you’ll be eating.
- Shopping.
Shopping! Some of the best designs, fabrics and couture in the
world!
- Buy your
plane ticket well in advance and use any mileage you might have
to upgrade to business class. That way your flight can be a fun
part of your vacation, too.
- Planes are
typically cheaper than trains in Europe these days, though the
train is more scenic. Skycanner.com
is a good resource for looking for the lowest priced flights between
cities. Book early for the best rate (just like in the U.S.)
- Become friendly
with two of Google’s applications – Google Maps and Google Translate.
Plan the routes to your destination before you leave. I found
that by writing the directions of where I was going on a piece
of paper, I blended in so well, tourists asked me for directions!
I also found Google Maps to be FAR more accurate than the other
websites. And Google Translate is amazing! Arrive and learn the
essential sentences with the click of your fingertips!
- Street names
are written on the sides of the buildings. It’s important to have
very specific directions because one street can change names two
or more times as it winds through different neighborhoods. Paris
is such a compact city that you can walk to most major destinations
(which is definitely part of the fun).
- When booking
your lodging, it can be very helpful to read the reviews of other
travelers. I’ve found Expedia.com to be the most reliable when
traveling to Europe, both for finding the best rates and having
the most helpful traveler’s comments. (In the U.S., I prefer Priceline’s
Name Your Own Price.)
- In general,
take away one star. If the hotel says five-star, it’s probably
five stars. But if it says four stars, then expect the room size
and amenities you’d expect in a three star hotel, and on down
the line. Showers, beds, rooms, etc. will all be much smaller
than the standard American room.
- Don’t bother
taking hair appliances or a lot of other electronic devices, and
do plan on purchasing an adaptor as quickly as possible to charge
your cell phone and/or computer. Many electronic appliances (that
are not adapted to both American and European voltage) won’t work.
You’ll either fry the blow dryer or your hair or both. This is
a good reason to book a better hotel!
- There’s no
tipping in France! If someone does an extraordinary job, then
tipping one or two euro is considered okay. More than that is
so extravagant as to almost be insulting, if you’re with locals.
- Keep your
eyes out for a local boulangerie or Kebab stand where you can
grab a quick snack anytime of the day. The French eat dinner very
late and most restaurants are closed between 2:00 p.m. and 7:00
p.m.. You might find yourself starving in that long break between
lunch and dinner, especially if you were sightseeing through lunch
and have only consumed pain au chocolat at your petit dejeuner!
- Watch for
the pits! I’ve found the most delightful chocolate covered cherries
(with alcohol) and pizza Espagnole with olives – and each time,
surprise! The pits! It doesn’t diminish the exquisite flavors
– unless you break a tooth. So take care when eating and watch
out for the pits!
- The French
love dogs. Therefore, you also have to watch where you step...
About
Natalie Pace:
Natalie
Pace is the author of You
Vs. Wall Street and host of the Pace and Prosperity radio
show on BlogTalkRadio.com/NataliePace.
She is a repeat guest on Fox News, CNBC, ABC-TV and a contributor
to HuffingtonPost.com, Forbes.com, Sohu.com and BestEverYou.com.
As a philanthropist, she has helped to raise more than two million
for Los Angeles public schools and financial literacy. Follow her
on http://www.facebook.com/pages/NWPace,
and on YouTube.com/NataliePaceDOTCOM.
For more information please visit, http://www.nataliepace.com.
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Hotel
of the Century – Overlooking the Gorgeous Cote D’Azur.
by Natalie
Pace.
If you love
art, scandal, history, travel, beaches, amazing food and beautiful
people, then you can have it all by booking a reservation at the
Hotel of the Century – Hotel
Negresco, located in Nice, France.
In 1769, Marie
Antoinette’s carriage rolled into Versailles Palace (from her native
home in Austria) to assume the role of Princess of France. In 1774,
she became the Queen of France and Navarre, a job she was to enjoy
for almost twenty years before losing her head, title and privilege
to the guillotine of the French Revolution in 1793.
Exactly one
century later, in 1893, Henri Negresco, the son of a Romanian innkeeper
and gypsy violinist rolled into Monte Carlo. His management of the
restaurants and casinos there made him beloved by royalty, the power
elite and an emerging new class of "stars," which did
not go unnoticed by financier Alexandre Darracq. Together, they
engaged the top talent, including architect Gustave Eiffel, to build
the Grand Salon and the Hotel Negresco. In 1913, Hotel Negresco
opened and was immediately embraced by the A-list, turning a profit
of 800,000 gold francs and earning the title of the most sumptuous
of luxury hotels. Alas, the auspicious debut was shattered with
the onset of World War I in 1914.
Henri Negresco
became a hero of the war, transforming the hotel into a hospital,
paying for the upkeep of the 100 beds with his own money. Although
his efforts saved many lives, Negresco died in ruin two years after
the war ended, in 1920.
Today, Hotel
Negresco is owned by Jeanne Augier, an art and history lover, and
fierce patriot of France, who set out to transform the hotel into
a masterpiece – the world’s first and finest museum hotel. Hotel
guests (including royalty, the elite and A-list stars) are once
again dancing in Gustave Eiffel’s Grand Salon and sipping wine in
the all original Relais Bar. They can lounge in the Versailles Room,
viewing original palace portraits of King Louis XIV, King Louis
XV, Queens and a few portraits of the Kings’ "favorites"
(mistresses). Hallways are lined with famous original artwork and
lithographs. And the stunning chandelier in the Grand Salon was
originally intended for the Tsar of Russia.
I can honestly
say that my week long stay at the hotel was one of the highlights
of my life, and I have never been in any hotel that preserves the
rich, tragic and scandalous history of a region better than Nesgresco.
As for amenities, you can expect everything you’d expect in a five
star hotel anywhere in the world – including large bathrooms and
showers. Madame Augier personally oversees the décor in each
room, and each room is distinctly different.
Assembling a
collection of paintings, royal portraits and historically significant
artifacts is no small task, although it helps that Madame Augier
was friends with Salvador Dali, and many other artists! To find
out some of her tricks, and to discover what keeps a woman over
80 clocking into the office every day, I sat down with Madame Augier
on January 5, 2011.
Natalie Pace:
Your passion for art, decor and quality are clear to anyone staying
at the Hotel Negresco. What does art mean to you and why is
it such a key feature of Hotel Negresco?
I educated myself
about art in my youth by making personal trips to Versailles. In
my life, I have had the opportunity to travel throughout the world,
and unconsciously, I sought out similar locations. I must admit
that I sometimes admired one or two pieces, but never the entire
collection, as it was at the Versailles Palace.
I
always thought that a foreign tourist who did us the honor to visit
our country should leave with a piece of our heritage. I want our
customers, after a stay at the Negresco, to leave with the desire
to return, having experienced a vibrant element of the history of
France that they had the opportunity to discover here.
I
hated to make trips overseas that were without meaning. I thought
it was the same for foreign tourists, and the Negresco was to be
a sort of embassy of culture and history of France.
Outside of
the Louvre and Versailles, the Hotel Negresco has one of the finest
collections of royal French art and artifacts. How did you go about
collecting these works and why did it become a passion of yours?
I
am very patriotic. I love my country and I regretted that some French
people, because of money problems, would go abroad to sell some
of our best work. So I was able to retrieve the Louis XIV [portrait]
by Hyacinthe Rigaud, which was in Brussels, the portrait of Louis
XIV as a child, which was in Genoa. The portrait of Madame de Montespan
was in Germany. Etc. ... etc. ...
Where did
the idea of transforming Hotel Negresco into a Museum Hotel originate?
While traveling
around the world some years ago, I always treasured bringing back
new memories. It is more pleasant for our customers to spend a few
hours in our hotel and experience the works of art from our country,
than to travel here as tourist and carry home no novel remembrances.
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| Gustave
Eiffel’s Grand Salon at Hotel Negresco. |
Gustave Eiffel's
most famous work is the Eiffel Tower, however, the Grand Salon is
such an extraordinary example of Eiffel's craftsmanship, aestheticism
and design. For a guest, Hotel Negresco is simply awe-inspiring,
but behind the scenes, you must be doing so much work to make sure
that the history and the quality of the hotel is both authentic
and fresh. What is the biggest challenge to preserve the Hotel
in all its glory now and in the years ahead?
In order to
preserve my collection, I employ a team of highly specialized individuals.
For example, two students of the Ecole Boulle performed the carpentry-woodwork
renovations. When paintings need restoration, I reach out to those
specialists who restore the paintings at the Louvre Museum.
I
was pleased to add a young graduate of the Ecole du Louvre to our
team, who manages the preservation and maintenance of the Collection.
Finally,
the Endowment Fund that I created will ensure that the Negresco,
its teams and its collection still exist in the same state when
I am no longer able to oversee the hotel.
You are loved
by so many artists... Of all of your famous friends, including
Salvador Dali, who was the most fascinating to you and why?
The Côte
d'Azur, due to its worldwide reknown as an exceptionally wonderful
place, was frequented by many artists. My closest friends were Raymond
Moretti, Marc Chagall, Nadia Leger, Rene Gruau, etc ... and each
was more fascinating than the other!
Do you have
a favorite spot in your hotel?
I am proud
of the Versailles Room. With that room, I was finally able to assemble
the authentic documents and paintings that make it an exceptional
place for lovers of art.
Lastly,
at the age of 87, are there any secrets to living a long and wonder-filled
life that you wish to share?
It is essential,
at age 87, to have an activity that you love. If you don’t, then
you will only be thinking about dying. The secret to my achievements
at the Negresco and with this collection lie simply in this: my
personal curiosity was aroused. And the secret to life, always,
is to engage in a work activity with such passion that you forget
the passage of time.
Thank
you Madame Augier for your time and for creating the Hotel of the
Century!
Friends,
Lovers, Countrymen: Voila! I share this treasure with you. This
one needs to go on the Bucket List as one thing you simply must
do while you are alive on this planet.
For
more information and to book your stay at Hotel Nesgresco, simply
visit Hotel-Negresco-Nice.com.
Xxoo,
Natalie
About
Natalie Pace:
Natalie
Pace is the author of You
Vs. Wall Street and host of the Pace and Prosperity radio
show on BlogTalkRadio.com/NataliePace.
She is a repeat guest on Fox News, CNBC, ABC-TV and a contributor
to HuffingtonPost.com, Forbes.com, Sohu.com and BestEverYou.com.
As a philanthropist, she has helped to raise more than two million
for Los Angeles public schools and financial literacy. Follow her
on http://www.facebook.com/pages/NWPace,
and on YouTube.com/NataliePaceDOTCOM.
For more information please visit, http://www.nataliepace.com.
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Municipal
Bonds.
by Finra.org.
Staying
on the Safe Side of the Street in Rough Times.
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)
website. 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).
Ratings
Rise:
A number of ratings agencies have indicated they plan to move to
a uniform ratings scale for all bonds. In the past, most ratings
agencies have used a separate, and more stringent, set of standards
for rating municipal bonds than corporate bonds. As ratings agencies
employ this uniform standard, investors can expect to see a rise
in the ratings of thousands of municipal bonds. Investors should
not take this to mean these bonds have been deemed to carry reduced
credit risk. Rather, the improved rating reflects a method of evaluating
risk that is in keeping with the calibration used for corporate
bonds.
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 Advisor Public Disclosure website. 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. Beginning
on July 1, 2009, you will be able to 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.
About
FINRA:
The Financial Industry Regulatory Authority (FINRA),
is the largest independent regulator for all securities firms doing
business in the United States. All told, FINRA oversees nearly
4,800 brokerage firms, about 170,400 branch offices and approximately
643,000 registered securities representatives.
FINRA believes
investor protection begins with education. Using the Internet, the
media and public forums, we help investors build their financial
knowledge and provide them with essential tools to better understand
the markets and basic principles of saving and investing.
|
|
Debt World.
by Natalie
Pace.
Where does
the U.S. stand, and how close are we to having a downgrade in our
credit rating?
 |
| Rome's
Coliseum at night (Italy's Debt to GDP ratio is currently 118%)
|
Egypt is rioting,
but few headlines are devoted to an underlying cause – excessive
public debt and escalating food prices that are crushing to the
average person. Egypt’s debt to GDP ratio is 80.5%, inching closer
to the crisis range that has affected so many European nations.
On Thursday, January 27, 2011, Standard & Poor’s slashed Japan's
credit rating. Japan's debt to GDP ratio is the 2nd highest in the
world, at 2X debt to GDP. Only Zimbabwe's public debt to GDP ratio
is higher than Japan's, at 242%.
Over the past
few years, we’ve watched the debt crisis in PIIGS (Portugal, Ireland,
Italy, Greece and Spain), the implosion of Iceland’s economy, austerity
measures in France and the United Kingdom -- and there appear to
be more countries waiting in the wings to take their turn in the
hot seat. Even Germany, which has been key in bailing out the European
Union countries, has a debt to GDP ratio higher than Spain, at 74.8%.
So where does
the U.S. stand, and how close are we to having a downgrade in our
credit rating? According to a statement by the Moody’s credit rating
service on January 27, 2011, "Although no rating action is contemplated
at this time, the time frame for possible future actions appears
to be shortening, and the probability of assigning a negative outlook
in the coming two years is rising."
The U.S. ranks
28th most indebted nation in the world, at 62% debt to
GDP in 2010, according to the Congressional Budget Office, in their
report of Jan. 26, 2011. In 2011, the U.S. debt to GDP ratio is
expected to rise to 69.4%. (Bear in mind that if the debt that the
U.S. government is holding -- $4.5 trillion -- were added to the
CBO estimates of the current debt, we’d be at 100% debt to GDP right
now.) By comparison, Greece’s debt had soared to 144% of GDP at
the time of its credit crisis and bailout, and Ireland’s debt to
GDP was at 100%. Click to go to the CIA’s
World Factbook, which lists the Debt to GDP ranking by country.
As the Congressional
Budget Office notes in their January 26, 2011 Budget and
Economic Outlook, "Investors can lose confidence abruptly and
interest rates on government debt can rise sharply and unexpectedly.
The exact point at which such a crisis might occur for the United
States is unknown, in part because the ratio of federal debt to
GDP is climbing into unfamiliar territory and in part because the
risk of a crisis is influenced by other factors, including the government’s
long-term budget outlook, its near-term borrowing needs, the amount
of private saving, and foreign investors’ willingness to invest
in U.S. assets."
Republicans
say we are headed to the brink of destruction and we have to act
quickly and decisively to slash entitlements to avert catastrophe,
but everyone, regardless of party, wants the other guy to bite the
bullet. President Obama wants the U.S. to "invest" in
clean energy, infrastructure and technology to "compete,"
create jobs and recover, but no concrete plan to slash the deficit
and balance the budget was presented in his State of the Union Address
on January 25, 2011. And that stalemate allows the government to
add another projected $1.3 trillion to the deficit in 2011.
While the CBO
won’t "predict with any confidence" when a crisis will
occur, the risk increases as debt to GDP gets higher. Additionally,
as other countries boast of less debt, offering less risk with more
attractive yield, investors could be lured away from U.S. treasuries
into a basket of currencies. (Many insiders believe this is already
occurring in OPEC, China, Saudi Arabia and other nations and the
power elite.) The European Union and Canada may not be more attractive
than the U.S. (from a debt to GDP perspective), however, Australia’s
debt to GDP of 22.4% is one of the lowest in the world, with the
added attraction that this free country is also rich in natural
resources and strategically located next to the new wealth in Asia
(China). (Don’t rush out to buy this currency without understanding
how currency is manipulated by the central governments.)
Spain averted
a European Union bailout on January 18, 2011, by selling $7.34 billion
(5.5 billion euro) in short-term Treasury bills (12-18 month) at
a yield of about 3%. Ask yourself this, "Would you purchase
a 12-18 month U.S. Treasury bill that offered 3% yield?" Spain
was able to attract buyers with that offer, so it is very likely
that the U.S. can as well. However, the ability to avert a short-term
disaster doesn’t mean that the U.S. (or Spain) should allow public
debt to continue to escalate. After all, in a year and a half Spain
will have to issue new debt again and if the debt to GDP ratio has
grown more ugly, fewer investors will be interested, unless the
yield is increased substantially.
The U.S. debt
is rapidly approaching the levels that spurred the European crises,
and immediate action is necessary to keep us (US) from the chaos,
austerity measures and riots that several European nations have
seen of late. For your information, the current debt crisis in the
developed world was predicted in my book, You
Vs. Wall Street, which was penned in 2007. For the
underlying root causes of the budget and debt crises in all of the
developed world and most legacy corporations (like, but not limited
to, the airlines and auto manufacturers), and some potential cures,
read, chapter 20 of You
Vs. Wall Street, entitled "The Theory of Economic
Evolution." By embracing the qualities of our founding parents,
recognizing how much healthier we are than our grandparents at the
same age and asking not what our country can do for us, but what
we can do to make our nation strong and robust again, the U.S. recovery
could be spurred by the horses that always fuel economic growth
– the people.
Additional
Facts on Debt:
1.
By the end of 2011, the Congressional
Budget Office projects, that public debt will be $10.4 trillion
and, at 69 percent of GDP, the highest level since 1950. (from page
20 of the 190-page report)
2. The
Office
of Budget and Management estimates $15.299 trillion Gross
Domestic Product in 2011 ($14.6239 in 2010). According to the OMB,
Gross Federal Debt in 2010 (est.) was $13.786 trillion. By subtracting
"Less: Held By Government Accounts," of $4.4889 trillion, we get
the Total of $9.297 trillion that the CBO uses for their GDP to
growth projections.
3. Gross
Federal Debt is 94.3% of GDP in 2010, whereas "Total" Federal Debt
is 63.6% of GDP in 2010 (est.), according to the OBM.
About
Natalie Pace:
Natalie
Pace is the author of You
Vs. Wall Street and host of the Pace and Prosperity radio
show on BlogTalkRadio.com/NataliePace.
She is a repeat guest on Fox News, CNBC, ABC-TV and a contributor
to HuffingtonPost.com, Forbes.com, Sohu.com and BestEverYou.com.
As a philanthropist, she has helped to raise more than two million
for Los Angeles public schools and financial literacy. Follow her
on http://www.facebook.com/pages/NWPace,
and on YouTube.com/NataliePaceDOTCOM.
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 all
in on any asset class or individual stocks. 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.
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.
.
|
|
Is
the U.S. the Next Greece?
A
candid Q&A with global strategist, Dr. Marc Miles.
 |
| Marc A.
Miles. |
Greece’s public
debt has ballooned to 144%. The European Union and International
Monetary Fund bailed the country out with $146 billion loan package
that required "austerity" measures. Riots ensued. Prior
to Greece’s problems, the European Union, led by Germany, also bailed
out Ireland. Italy isn’t in much better shape, with a debt to GDP
of 118%. And while Canada largely avoided the financial crisis that
led to the worldwide Great Recession, that nation has a higher debt
to GDP than the U.S., the U.K. and Spain, at 82.9%, 63.6%, 63.4%
and 76.5%, respectively.
Clearly, it
isn’t just a formula like debt to GDP that predicts whether or not
a debt situation will become a crisis. Otherwise, Canada and Israel
would be in the headlines with PIIGS (Portugal, Italy, Ireland,
Greece and Spain).
So, will the
U.S. face a similar crisis this year? Next year? Ever? What will
it take to reduce our debt, increase our GDP growth, rollback the
high unemployment and have fun again? For answers, I turned to Dr.
Marc Miles, a respected global strategist. Dr. Miles holds B.A.,
M.A., and Ph.D. degrees from the University of Chicago and a M.Sc.
degree from the London School of Economics.
Natalie Pace:
We’ve seen headlines about PIIGS and investor trepidation about
how the troubles in those countries might impact the U.S. bond and
stock markets. It appears that quite a lot of countries
have extremely high debt to GDP ratios, not just PIIGS, including
countries like France, the UK, Germany, Canada and Japan – countries
that have not been in the headlines. How have those countries
skirted controversy, and will their debt become a crisis in the
near future?
Dr. Marc Miles:
The markets are concerned not just with the level of debt, but also
whether it is increasing or declining and whether a country will
be able to continue servicing it. If you look at countries
like the UK and Germany, they have taken very positive steps to
reduce their current annual deficit by reducing spending.
The new UK government has promised for example to reduce government
employees by something like 10%. Germany did not participate
in the "stimulus" hysteria, and in fact took the opposite
path of reducing deficits instead. Canada is in great shape,
for it did not have the housing and banking crises and did not have
to bail out any industry.
Do you believe
debt will become a big issue in 2011 for the U.S.?
Yes, debt will
be a big issue in the US this year. You already see that in
the headlines/stories. California is unlikely to make significant
steps towards shrinking its recurring annual budget deficit.
Illinois has taken a counter-productive approach of raising tax
rates on individuals and businesses. If anything, this will
only improve the debt standing of Wisconsin and Indiana. New
York is in a pickle as well. As these states try to deal in
the coming months with the fiscal 2012 budget (starts July 1), the
news stories and pressure will only build. On top of that
Moody’s and S&P have already warned recently that they may review
the rating on US government debt. Hold on to your hats if
there is a downgrade!
Natalie
Pace Note: The official word from Moody’s on January 27, 2011, was:
"Although no rating action is contemplated at this time, the time
frame for possible future actions appears to be shortening, and
the probability of assigning a negative outlook in the coming two
years is rising."
We’re starting
to see states, like Illinois, take dramatic actions to bridge budgetary
shortfalls. Politicians have discussed clearing the path to
allow states to declare bankruptcy. What are municipal bond
holders to think? Is the lure of triple-tax-free municipal
bonds worth the risk?
 |
Soul
Acrobat Alvin Tam in front of the Las Vegas sign
Las Vegas, NV has the highest foreclosure rate in the U.S. 1
in every 9 housing units received a foreclosure filing in 2010
|
Be careful on
the bankruptcy issue. Municipalities can declare Chapter 9
bankruptcy (analogous to Chap 11 bankruptcy for corporations), but
states CANNOT. That means municipalities can reorganize and
reduce their labor promises, but states cannot. A big difference.
With the Republican House probably unwilling to bail them out, the
states face major hurdles. Also while there are maybe five
states that are near bankruptcy and maybe five or more that are
just over the border, that still leaves about 40 states that are
okay right now. You also have to be selective about municipalities.
Traditionally,
bonds were a safe haven, especially as people near retirement.
What’s safe in 2011 and going forward?
Good question
about what is safe. I think the best analogy is the 1970s,
where both bonds and stocks did very poorly for about a decade.
The best investments were vehicles like Swiss francs. I see
that the value of the franc has already shot up. An alternative
is to buy Canadian stocks. Their currency is appreciating
relative to the US dollar, and many of their industries are basic
materials that should hold their real value.
The Debt
GDP numbers are based upon public debt. Will you talk a little
about private debt and how this affects countries, like the U.S.?
We’ve seen the auto industry and the airline industry use the bankruptcy
courts to restructure their debt burden and employee benefit packages.
Are other private industries as vulnerable?
I am not sure
which other industries are vulnerable, but if I had to take a guess
I would look for industries with legacy costs like defined benefit
plans. Those are a dying breed even for old industries.
The last strong holds of defined benefit plans are governments at
all levels, particularly the US government.
What is the
most important tip you can give investors for 2011?
Be prepared
for inflation. We already see it picking up to 3-4 percent
in the UK and Europe. If the debt crisis in the US becomes
really prominent, then currency traders will let the bottom fall
out of the dollar, and inflation here is likely to become as great
or greater than that in Europe. Already precious metals, industrial
materials, and even food products are shooting up on commodity markets.
(The one big exception is natural gas, which has fallen by about
20%. Luckily I heat my home with gas.) Last time I saw
anything like that was 1973 as the "Great Inflation" started.
Invest in things that will not lose their real value as inflation
rises.
Which countries
are the best for portfolio diversification purposes?
As I already
mentioned, Switzerland and Canada are prime candidates. Inflation
could also improve the position of emerging markets that are primarily
natural resource based.
Industry
is starting to pour back into Argentina, particularly to develop
lithium mining. Is there any easy way to invest in Argentina and/or
in the Argentine peso?
Why on earth
would you want to invest in Argentine pesos? The Argentine
government continues to rip off its inhabitants. Sure the
economy’s growing, but so is the inflation rate. People don’t
have trust in the currency or the government’s willingness to stand
behind it.
Excellent
tips, Dr. Miles. Thank you so much!
About
Dr. Marc Miles
Marc Miles is the former Editor of the annual Heritage Foundation/Wall
Street Journal Index of Economic Freedom. Prior to that he
spent almost 20 years advising large institutional money managers
on changing trends in the U.S. and global markets. He holds
B.A., M.A., and Ph.D. degrees from the University of Chicago and
a M.Sc. degree from the London School of Economics.
Other
Articles of Interest
"Don't
Get Fooled Again," from Sept. 2010 ezine, vol. 7, issue
8.
"Latin
America Funds Doubled," from August 2010 ezine, vol.
7, issue 8.
"Hot
Funds of Summer," from July 2010 ezine, vol. 7, issue
7.
"Bond
Beautification Project. What Should You Do With Your Bonds?"
vol. 7, iss. 10.
"Spring
Rally," from April 2010 ezine, vol. 7. iss. 8.
|
|
Don’t
Just Survive. Thrive!
by
Natalie Pace.
Try
my Thrive Budget, rather than your Buried Alive in Bills budget.
Are
you thriving and loving your life, or are you just surviving from
paycheck to paycheck and running out of money before the end of
the month? Cutting out cafe lattes will not change anything in your
life. Getting your big-ticket items in a reasonable range will launch
you into dream come true living VERY FAST! 50% to thrive and 50%
to survive baby!
10
Rules of Becoming Rich
My
Thrive Budget™, upon which these rules are based, is outlined
in greater detail in my book You
Vs. Wall Street.
- Give
yourself a raise. 10%
of your net income should go on auto-deposit into your 401(k),
IRA, health savings account, etc. First. Period. It’s tax deductible.
Pay yourself now, or pay the IRS later. If you invest right,
your nest egg should earn 10% while you sleep, meaning your
money will be worth more than your salary in seven years and
will out-earn you in 25 years.
- Be charitable.
Tithe
10% to charity. Fuel your favorite cause with your cash, take
the tax write-off and reap the benefits of helping your community
and networking with others who have like-minded goals! Pay your
favorite charity now, or pay the IRS later. The best, highest
paying jobs that I’ve ever had came from the relationships that
I developed through my charitable giving.
- Educate
yourself, your family and others. Education
is the single highest correlating factor with income. Surgeons
make more money than dishwashers, and surgeons who have educated
themselves about investing make greater gains than those who
invest blindly (or not at all). According to the Bureau of Labor
Statistics, full-time workers without a high school diploma
earned $438/week on average in the fourth quarter of 2010, compared
to $1,139 for a Bachelor’s Degree, and $3,383/week (for male)
professionals with a master’s or higher. PhDs, medical, business
and law students often sleep on a couch (or small dorm rooms)
for years, in order to earn double the income for life!
- Have
fun. Health
is wealth. You can’t earn a great living if you can’t get out
of bed. And pleasure is a free endorphin that releases anti-oxidants
that keep you healthy and sexy. What a beautiful reason to have
some fun today!
- Double
your pleasure. Double
your fun budget! Make sure that you are spending 20% of your
income for FUN. You are worth it! I take 10% out in cash and
spend it until it’s gone. The other 10% I save up for a year
to do something really adventurous that I can enjoy with my
family and friends. (In 2009, I spent a month in Italy and in
2010 a month in France!) I know what you’re thinking. You don’t
have room in the budget, which leads me to the next tip.
- Stop
complaining. Some
people say, "I spend my fun money on my home." That’s
cool, but then stop complaining that you don’t take vacations
and start enjoying your home more. Can you have artist salons,
or a front porch bayou Bluegrass party where someone blows on
a jug and another plays spoons? A barbecue and three-legged
race? A monthly yoga potluck dinner? If you’re not having fun,
your retail therapy isn’t working! And if your home is costing
you an arm and a leg, then what kind of a way is that to go
through life. Get creative about reducing your big-ticket items
and you will find yourself with a lot more dough to thrive on.
- Basic
needs must be under 50%, including taxes. Ha!
Think this is impossible? Guess which ethnic group is the highest
income earner in the U.S.. Before I reveal the answer, I want
to point out that this group was one of the lowest wage earners
in the U.S. at the turn of the last century. How did one ethnic
group soar to the top of the charts so quickly? By focusing
on education and dramatically reducing basic needs expenditures.
If two families had to live in a two-bedroom apartment so that
the kids could go to medical school, they did that. And now,
American Asians make a weekly income that is 7% higher than
whites and 35-50% higher than the weekly income of blacks and
Hispanics in the U.S., respectively. (source: Bureau of Labor
Statistics, January 20, 201)
- Think
partner, not competitor. Remember
back in the 1970s when malls were created? By teaming up to
put everything you need in one place, all of the retail stores
benefitted. Coachella (and Woodstock before it) puts all of
the greatest bands in one spot for an entire weekend. What can
you do to partner up with your competitors and create a win-win
for everyone?
- Dream
bigger. When
John D. Rockefeller went into the oil business, in 1863, no
one dreamed of freeways. When Google founders Sergey Brin and
Larry Page began perfecting online search in nanoseconds, most
people were still on dial-up. When President John F. Kennedy
promised to walk on the moon, it still took a week to mail a
letter from New York to San Francisco. Before John Lennon imagined
peace with Yoko, he imagined taking America by storm with the
Beatles. What great dream do you have? What can you do now to
start on the path of creating it and who can help you with it?
As Larry Page, the co-founder and new CEO of Google says, "I
think it is often easier to make progress on mega-ambitious
dreams. I know that sounds completely nuts. But, since no one
else is crazy enough to do it, you have little competition."
- 21 days
off the grid. Stuck
in a rut? 21 days is all you need to create new possibilities.
If you have never been on a 21-day sabbatical, there is no greater
way to expand your possibilities and your thinking. Whether
it is an Eat. Pray. Love journey, or an ashram experience,
or a trek to Mt. Everest, a love jaunt to the Cote d’Azur or
training to be the first rock star to perform on the moon, commit
to creating something new and exciting in your life.
Success
stories
Steve
Jobs, the rock star of Apple Computer and iTunes, slept on the floor
of his friend’s dorm room to crash college calligraphy courses before
founding Apple. The chairman of an $11 billion company once slept
on his parent’s couch while educating himself to make the transition
from football coach to CEO. And one of the richest women in the
world, J.K. Rowling, received public assistance while she created
one of the most beloved stories of all time – Harry Potter.
Bottom
Line
So,
sing your song… loudly. Dance as if everyone is watching. (They
are … on Facebook. And Twitter. And YouTube. And BlogTalkRadio…)
And fall in love with your ability to transform your currency into
the power that fuels your dream come true life.
Take-Away
Suggestions
- Take a
21-day vacation from the status quo. Try the Eternal City (Rome)
or Paris or Machu Picchu or the hometown you haven’t seen in
forever. You could use it.
- Dream bigger.
Not everyone writes a #1 song or stars in an Academy-Award winning
film. But everyone does have something unique to give to the
world.
- 50% to
survive and 50% to Thrive!
About
Natalie Pace:
Natalie
Pace is the author of You
Vs. Wall Street and host of the Pace and Prosperity radio
show on BlogTalkRadio.com/NataliePace.
She is a repeat guest on Fox News, CNBC, ABC-TV and a contributor
to HuffingtonPost.com, Forbes.com, Sohu.com and BestEverYou.com.
As a philanthropist, she has helped to raise more than two million
for Los Angeles public schools and financial literacy. Follow her
on http://www.facebook.com/pages/NWPace,
and on YouTube.com/NataliePaceDOTCOM.
For more information please visit, http://www.nataliepace.com.
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|
Traditional
Bookstores are Doomed.
by Dr.
Gary S. Becker
The
traditional bookstore is doomed by e-readers and online sales of
hard copy books. I use the word "doomed" in the same sense
that online digital sales of movies and music have doomed movie
rental stores, movie theatres, and stores that sell albums of music.
Doomed does not mean that these stores will quickly, or ever fully,
disappear, but that they have received deadly blows from Internet
competition.
Joseph Schumpeter,
an outstanding economist in the first half of the 20th
century, originated the term "creative destruction" to
describe new technologies and other forms of new competition that
wreak havoc on older and established industries. The process is
creative because it provides consumers and producers with more effective
ways of satisfying their wants. The process is at the same time
destructive because it greatly reduces the value of services and
products provided by older industries.
Extreme examples
of creative destruction from the 20th century include
the complete substitution of cars for horses and buggies, movies
with speaking for silent movies, and computers for typewriters.
Less extreme are the large reduction in clerical and secretarial
staffs caused by the development of computers and the Web, and the
sizable reduction in demand for milk and eggs induced by better
information on the health value of low cholesterol diets.
A similar creative
destruction process began for bookstores with Amazon’s development
of online book sales that offered huge inventories of books, convenience
of purchase, speedy deliveries, online reviews of books, and various
other services that made it more efficient and often cheaper to
buy books online rather than in bookstores. Sales of books online
started slowly, but they have accelerated as consumers became more
familiar with the process of buying books (and other goods) online.
I first started using Amazon at my summer home since it is not near
any bookstore. Discovering the convenience of buying books online,
I now buy online all year, although I still enjoy visiting bookstores.
Effective online
readers, like Amazon’s Kindle, and Apple’s iPad, are only a few
years old, but they have become big hits since they can be used
both to purchase books online, and to read books in digital form.
Hundreds of books can be stored digitally in a single Reader that
weighs less than a couple of pounds. They are especially valuable
when traveling, but are useful when reading in bed or eating, and
also with traditional reading when seated on a comfortable chair.
They are particularly useful for individuals with weak eyesight
since print size can be easily adjusted. This is why digital readers
will appeal eventually even more to older persons than to others,
although mainly younger persons are the ones who so far have bought
digital readers because old persons are less familiar with digitalization.
I do not expect
bookstores to rapidly disappear the way the production of silent
movies virtually ceased once talking movies were created. However,
I do expect an accelerating decline in the number of bookstores
as many close down due to bankruptcy and excessive losses. Some
bookstores will continue to exist to cater to men and women who
like to browse among physical copies of books, and because some
owners of bookstores get great pleasure out of selling and being
surrounded by books. Many bookstores that survive are likely to
combine selling hard copy books with that of other products. For
example, university bookstores usually also sell clothing that have
the university logo, computers, greeting cards, snacks and coffee,
and other goods that cater to students and faculty. Other surviving
bookstores might combine selling of hard copy books in physical
facilities with online sales of hard copy books, and online sales
of digital books.
The decline
of bookstores, theatres, laundries, and other retail industries
with physical facilities illustrates a trend that runs counter to
older ideas about the effects of economic development. The process
of development has been presumed to cause a substitution of market
activities for home production. For example, households in poor
rural societies have not only grown their own food, but also made
much of their clothing, washed their clothes, baked their bread,
and cooked from scratch their other food. As countries underwent
economic growth, many of these productive activities left the home
and migrated to the marketplace. Factory-made clothing was substituted
for clothing made at home, and bakeries and laundries developed
to make bread and sweets, and to wash, clean, and dry clothes.
Further technological
developments, however, such as small motors used in home washing
and drying machines, and small machines that cooked bread easily
at home, shifted many activities back into the home, and thereby
saved on time and energy spent in the shopping process. The online
digital revolution is a further major step in this trend of returning
activities to the home. Time and effort are saved, for example,
when instead of going to movie theatres, consumers both order and
download films online to be viewed at "home", either on
television sets, or increasingly on computers.
From this perspective,
what is happening to bookstores is not unusual. "Books"
are still read at "home", but increasingly they are also
purchased at home, and not only in hard copy form. Digital books
are a true revolution, but their effects on bookstores are only
a small part of a broader technological development that has brought
important activities into the home.
About
Gary Becker:
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 website
and blog.
|
|
House
of the Rising Sun: A Check-Up on Housing.
by Liz
Ann Sonders, Senior Vice President, Chief Investment Strategist,
Charles Schwab &
Co., Inc.
January 18, 2011
 |
| Liz Ann
Sonders. |
Key
points
Housing
is becoming less national and more regional in terms of strength/weakness.
Affordability
is up but so are foreclosures.
Employment
remains key to housing, but be aware of housing's diminished impact
on the economy.
It's been
a while since I wrote specifically on the state of housing and
the questions are cropping up again. In particular, I've been
asked a lot about the relationship between housing and employment,
and housing and the economy, both of which I'll address in this
report.
Let me start by summarizing where I think we are in the cycle.
Although I believe the overall residential real-estate market
is generally finding its bottom, I think we have to take a step
back and begin again to look at real estate regionally, not just
nationally.
Housing is not a monolith. Yes, when the bubble was inflating
the rising tide did lift all (house) boats, and when the tide
went out with the bursting of the bubble, it took all (house)
boats with it. But I think that's coming to an end, and going
forward we'll see both pockets of improvement and continued malaise.
Not all housing markets are created equal
Geographic pockets of strength or weakness are typically a function
of local economics, inventories and demographics. We're starting
to see more differentiation when diving into the numbers across
the country. The S&P/Case-Shiller Home Price Indices were
recently released, with data through October 2010. They include
a 20-city composite of metropolitan areas, and in terms of the
one-year percentage change, here are the top and bottom five regions:

Another
way to slice the data is to show the actual index level. For instance,
an October index level of 186.7 in Washington DC indicates that
average home prices are more than 86% above their January 2000 values.
An index level of 68.9 in Detroit indicates that average home prices
are still more than 30% below their January 2000 values. That's
the worst showing by far. Below are the rest of the top and bottom
five regions based on index level:

Ugly year for foreclosures
The biggest black eye that remains on the face of housing is the
foreclosure problem. In 2011 lenders are likely to foreclose on
more homes than any other year since the housing crisis began in
2006. The only saving grace is that RealtyTrac believes 2011 will
be the peak in foreclosures, predicting 1.2 million homes will be
repossessed this year, up from one million in 2010.
The pain will likely be the most acute in states that have already
suffered the worst, including Nevada, Arizona, Florida and California,
or in states with bleak economic outlooks, including Michigan and
Illinois. More than half the country's foreclosure activity occurred
in five states in 2010: California, Florida, Arizona, Illinois and
Michigan; meanwhile, Nevada posted the highest foreclosure rate
in 2010 for the fourth consecutive year.
Affordability has spiked
But all is not bleak. Most measures of housing affordability have
improved markedly. As regular readers know, I keep a close eye on
"real mortgage rates."
Like real gross domestic product (GDP), which is nominal GDP less
the inflation rate, the real mortgage rate is the nominal mortgage
rate (30-year fixed) minus the rate of inflation (or deflation)
in home prices. Remember, it's not just the mortgage rate that matters
to demand, but also the rate at which houses are appreciating or
depreciating.
As you can see in the chart below, real mortgage rates have come
down substantially from their peak (which corresponded to the trough
in the housing market), but remain well above their trough (which
corresponded to the peak in the housing market).
Real Mortgage Rates Coming Down

Source:
FactSet, Federal Reserve, National Association of Realtors, as of
November 30, 2010.
The traditional measures of housing affordability have improved
meaningfully, too. The first chart below shows the Housing Affordability
Index, which is composed of mortgage rates, home prices and personal
income data. As you can see, affordability is at an all-time peak.
The second chart below shows the ratio of home prices to disposable
personal income, and the news is good here, too, as prices have
come down to at least a 30-year low.
Housing Affordability Hitting Records

Source: FactSet, National Association of Realtors, as of November
30, 2010.

Source: FactSet, Federal Finance Housing Board,
High Frequency Economics, as of September 30, 2010.
Housing and employment … the connection
The key to improving demand may lie in something else besides affordability,
and that's job growth. The prospects for employment and housing
are likely more linked today than any time in history, given the
severity of the crisis in both.
As detailed in a study by Ned Davis Research (NDR), real (inflation-adjusted)
house prices have historically stopped falling when the unemployment
rate has peaked. This potentially bodes well for the housing-is-bottoming
story given the drop in the unemployment rate from its October 2010
peak of 10.1% to its present 9.4%. However, real house prices have
historically not started to rise until the unemployment rate
approaches the "full employment rate (NAIRU)."
Declining Unemployment Rate Should Help House Prices

Source:
FactSet, Ned Davis Research, Inc. (Further distribution prohibited
without prior permission. Copyright 2011 (c) Ned Davis Research,
Inc. All rights reserved.), as of September 30, 2010.
Yellow
shaded areas represent periods of rising unemployment. Gray shaded
areas represent periods from unemployment peaks until 1.2% points
above Non-Accelerating Inflation Rate of Unemployment (NAIRU), a
level of unemployment below which inflation rises.
The gray shaded areas represent the time from the unemployment rate
peak until it falls to within 1.2 percentage points of the full
employment rate. (Although it appears as if the unemployment rate
peaked last October, until that's confirmed, the most recent span
will remain shaded yellow.)
Assuming the full employment rate is around 7% (NDR's estimate),
real house prices likely won't start rising until the unemployment
rate falls below 8%. If the full employment rate is closer to 6%,
as is assumed by many economists, then the recovery could take even
longer.
Burst bubbles take longer to heal
As you can see in the chart below, we're already more than five
years into the home-sales downturn, by far the longest stretch (gray
bars) in history. The decline in price is rivaled only by the downturn
from 1978-1982 when mortgage rates were in double digits and the
United States was heading into back-to-back recessions.
Sales Finally Picking Up?

Source: FactSet, National Association of Realtors,
Ned Davis Research, Inc. (Further distribution prohibited without
prior permission. Copyright 2011 (c) Ned Davis Research, Inc.
All rights reserved.), as of November 30, 2010. Gray shaded areas
represent downturns.
This downturn is the result of a bubble that burst, but was certainly
exacerbated by the related financial crisis and severe recession.
NDR compared this bubble to a composite of the four historic mega-bubbles:
the Dow Jones Industrial Average in 1929, crude oil in 1980, the
Nikkei in 1990 and the NASDAQ in 2000, seen below.
Housing Following the Bubble Path

Source:
FactSet, Ned Davis Research, Inc. (Further distribution prohibited
without prior permission. Copyright 2011 (c) Ned Davis Research,
Inc. All rights reserved.), Standard and Poor's. Historical Bubble
Composite as of January 1, 2002, thru May 31, 2016. Case-Shiller
Composite as of October 31, 2010.
The picture of the prior bubbles is consistent with our view that
housing has probably broadly bottomed, but the path up is likely
to be relatively flat, elongated and volatile among geographic regions.
Housing and GDP … the connection
Finally, the real key question is the impact of housing on the overall
economy. One of the most common questions I get is whether we can
get decent GDP growth without housing doing the heavy lifting, as
it did in the last up cycle. Here's where I think many people have
it wrong, much as they did after the bursting of the tech bubble
in 2000.
As the economy exited recession in 2001, the thinking was that the
economy couldn't recover without leadership by technology, given
its prior power as an economic driver. However, from the peak in
2000 when equipment and software represented more than 9% of GDP,
it was subsequently on its way to near 6% by 2008 … only since then
has it begun to rise again. The economy recovered, as did the stock
market, without leadership from technology.
As you can see in the final chart below, housing has been on a similar
path. At the peak, residential real estate represented more than
6% of GDP, whereas now it's a record low of little more than 2%.
Housing Is Less Important to GDP

Source: Bureau of Economic Analysis, FactSet,
as of September 30, 2010.
That of course doesn't mean housing can't be a negative contributor—it
just means there are other forces that have gained power as this
cycle has unfolded. As an example, auto production now accounts
for a larger share of GDP than housing, and its prospects are looking
much better.
Upside potential?
The potential good news is that housing starts have been running
at a pace of only 40% of their 30-year average, well below the household
formation rate. In addition, we're seeing improved price and volume
performance for non-distressed sales. Supply is heading back up
thanks to increasing foreclosures, but we could be getting close
to the last ugly Case-Shiller report and the market-clearing process
should pick up in the spring selling season.
Necessary ingredients for a healthy recovery in housing would be
the aforementioned down slope in the unemployment rate, a further
loosening of the credit environment, no significant (further) spike
in mortgage rates, and general improvement to consumer confidence.
Again, we believe the prospects for housing are improving, though
certainly not stellar, but our optimism about the economic recovery
could feed into better-than-expected housing news as well.
Important
Disclosures
The information provided here is for general informational
purposes only and should not be considered an individualized recommendation
or personalized investment advice. The investment strategies mentioned
here may not be suitable for everyone. Each investor needs to review
an investment strategy for his or her own particular situation before
making any investment decision.
All expressions of opinion are subject to change without notice
in reaction to shifting market conditions. Data contained herein
from third party providers is obtained from what are considered
reliable sources. However, its accuracy, completeness or reliability
cannot be guaranteed.
Examples provided are for illustrative (or "informational") purposes
only and not intended to be reflective of results you can expect
to achieve.
|
|
Is Your Guru a Shaman or Showman?
Readers Ask
Natalie to Shed Light on How to Tell the Difference – Before It’s
Too Late.
Dear
Natalie:
When I heard
about the deaths at James Arthur Ray’s sweat lodge in Sedona in
2009, I was so angry that all of those people had trusted him with
their lives, when his team wasn’t really qualified to build sweat
lodges or conduct the ritual. And then I realized that I had fallen
for the same kind of thing by attending Millionaire Training Seminars
that had resulted in me making investments (offered at those seminars)
that have destroyed my nest egg and ruined my credit. Many of the
speakers who sold me products declared bankruptcy, and I have no
recourse to recover my losses. Now, that same guru who suckered
almost $50,000 out of me (I registered for a lot of the conferences)
is selling Get Out of Debt seminars, when just last year s/he was
selling Millionaire Training Seminars. Obviously, I won’t be attending,
but how do I keep from falling for this in the future?
My Shaman
Was Just a Showman (but at least I didn’t die)
Dear Shaman,
You have just
learned the hard way that the measure of a guru isn’t how high s/he
can leap on stage, or how many fist pumps s/he can conjure up to
whip the crowd in a frenzy, or how many whistles and toots and gadgets
s/he uses, or how many cars s/he can give away or even how many
books have been sold. Our greatest gurus throughout history were
much quieter than that. It was their actions, more than their words,
which inspired us.
Gandhi didn’t
just talk about freedom and eliminating the caste system
in India, he dressed in simple "untouchable" clothing
and mingled with government leaders as well as those who were previously
neglected by society. He weaved his own simple clothing to promote
local artisanship. Martin Luther King and Rosa Parks didn’t sell
seminars on empowerment. They stood up to the injustices occurring
in America in the 1960s and, in a peaceful way, forced a cultural
shift that allowed Blacks to enjoy the rights they, by law, already
had won. Betty Williams and Mairead Corrigan did not sell peace
books through infomercials, they organized peace marches in Northern
Ireland, standing up to the violent and aggressive leadership, which
was on the both sides of the conflict, to save lives and reduce
the power of terrorism in the region. Jesus performed miracles.
For free.
A shaman will
have a PhD in results. A showman will tell you s/he does, and may
even have a degree to boot, but the proof is in the pudding. Does
s/he spend her time selling you things or performing miracles?
When my son
was two, I went to the most respected pediatrician in my city. She
was touted as a progressive, pro-breast feeding, pro-nutrition MD
and she was on many boards, as well. Yet, my son had chronic ear
infections to the point where this physician recommended that we
start him on a low dose of antibiotics year-round. Whoa!
I had to make
a trip to the UCLA Biomedical Library to discover what I suspected
– that strategy doesn’t work. It produces a resistance to antibiotics,
a weak immune system (meaning susceptibility to every virus and
worse) and typically leads to hearing loss and surgery. It took
courage to stand up to my son’s doctor, and a lot of meticulous
searching to find a pediatrician who had an excellent track record
for healing chronic ear infections, but once I found Dr. Jay Gordon,
he took my son off of the daily 24-ounces of cow’s milk that the
previous pediatrician insisted on and within a few short months,
my son was healed. (Dr. Gordon correctly diagnosed my son as being
allergic to cow’s milk, which most Asians are.)
From that time
on, my son needed medical care only once – for a hernia (at the
age of five), which was genetic. The office visits were limited
to well child checkups for the rest of my son’s childhood!
(Dr. Gordon jokes that he does his job too well.) Amazing!
This doctor performed a miracle. As a result he was able to sell
me far fewer things (very few office visits), but he has received
more money from all of the referrals I have brought him.
So, how do you
determine who has a PhD in results, if even board certified physicians
can give you the wrong diagnosis and prescription?
You have to
do your due diligence before you enter into a deep, long lasting
relationship (business or personal) with anyone. You have to ask
questions and carefully reflect on the answers. This may sound difficult,
but my chapter "Brokers are Salesman, Not Surgeons," from
You
Vs. Wall Street has 12 questions you should ask
before hiring a Certified Financial Planner. These questions can
be modified for other professionals you are considering in other
disciplines as well. Interview your specialists, those people you
hire to help you with your health, wealth and well being, as if
you life depends upon it, because your lifestyle does.
Whether it is
your bottom line, your health or your assets, the faster you get
into alignment with strategies that really work, the faster you
can heal. So start now by taking ownership of your health and wealth
because, as Joe Moglia, the Chairman of TD AMERITRADE says, "Nobody
cares about your money more than you do." Dr. Gordon says the
same thing in a slightly different way; "Nobody knows your
child better than you do."
FYI: The
State of Arizona vs. James Arthur Ray trial starts on February 16,
2011 in Prescott, Arizona. Peace and healing to those affected by
this tragedy. You remain in our hearts.
About
Natalie Pace:
Natalie
Pace is the author of You
Vs. Wall Street and host of the Pace and Prosperity radio
show on BlogTalkRadio.com/NataliePace.
She is a repeat guest on Fox News, CNBC, ABC-TV and a contributor
to HuffingtonPost.com, Forbes.com, Sohu.com and BestEverYou.com.
As a philanthropist, she has helped to raise more than two million
for Los Angeles public schools and financial literacy. Follow her
on http://www.facebook.com/pages/NWPace,
and on YouTube.com/NataliePaceDOTCOM.
For more information please visit, http://www.nataliepace.com.
|
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Having Fun on the Wall
Street Rollercoaster.
by Natalie
Pace.
Includes
my Hot News on Cool Stocks Report.
Take your
profits early and often. Be a patient buyer and a ready seller by
using limit orders.
January 31,
2010
General
Stock Market Performance
|
Monday, 1.2.2008
|
Monday, 1.2.2009
|
Monday 1.3.2011
|
Friday, 1.28.2011
|
Gains 3-yr,
2-yr & 1 mo.
|
|
Dow: 13,044.12
|
Dow: 9,034.69
|
Dow: 11,577.43
|
Dow: 11,823.70
|
-9% & +31% & +2%
|
|
Nasdaq: 2,609.63
|
Nasdaq: 1,632.21
|
Nasdaq: 2,676.65
|
Nasdaq: 2,686.89
|
+3% & +65% & flat
|
|
S&P: 1,447.16
|
S&P: 931.80
|
S&P: 1,257.62
|
S&P: 1,276.34
|
-12% & +37% & +1%
|
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 Important Data
13X gains
on U.S. Gold, our 2009 Company of the Year!
NASDAQ
Outscored the Dow Jones Industrial Average, 69% to 30% since
2009
NASDAQ
Outscored Gold since 2009, 69% to 56%
13 out
of 14 Company of the Month features from 2010 are in the money.
Woo hoo!
Gold
tops stocks, real estate, bonds and T-Bills Over the Last 10 Years.

Compare those
returns to the returns of stocks, real estate, bonds, Treasury bills
and gold over the last 30 years.

Market
Update:
ENER1, one of
the hot companies on our Hot News on Cool Stocks list, has been
jumping around between a share price of $3.20 and $5.80 since the
first of the year. That’s a range of 81% potential gains. Cree (another
Hot company), hovered in the high $70 range for most of 2010, and
then dropped to the $50 range last week – at a time when NASDAQ
was still holding strong. Applied
Materials, the 2010 Company of the Year popped 35% right
after that feature in the December 2010 ezine.
So, how can
you play a market that is so irrational and volatile? By taking
your profits early and often. Quite simply, there is too much risk
in the marketplace -- with the levels of debt that is being held
in most of the developed world -- to buy and hold. One strategy
works brilliantly – annual rebalancing. Simply rebalancing your
diversified nest egg on an annual basis means that your nest egg
grew by 10% or more over the last decade, even more if you were
overweighting NASDAQ over the Dow Jones Industrial Average and small
caps over large caps. For most individual stocks (excluding very
hot industries, like gold, technology and natural resources), patient
buying and selling was essential to profits. (Gold and technology
have been paying off steadily since 2006.)
The easiest
way to be on the right side of the buy low/sell high equation is
with limit orders -- both in your nest egg and in your Stocks on
Steroids accounts. Interested in an Australian ETF? Why not place
an order for your favorite fund with a buy price that is at or near
the one or two year low? Unsure whether to take your nest egg profits
once a year or quarterly? Why not place a sell limit order at a
key price target and let the market rebalance for you? The same
applies to the stock in individual corporations. Limit orders allow
you to buy or sell at the the price you most desire, even if you
are on vacation and not near a computer.
Hot Industries
So
what industries will be hot in 2011? Based upon my continuing analysis,
the following areas of the world and the world marketplace are poised
to lead the world equities: Australia, Latin America (particularly
Chile and Argentina), natural resources, basic materials, technology
(particularly nanotech), clean energy and NASDAQ. However, the purchase
price is just as important as the industry, so be sure to determine
the best buy price before adding these slices to your nest egg pie.
Below are the
top performing funds of 2010. Note that small caps led returns (again),
growth beat value and large cap value was one of the lowest performers
(the Bailout Index).
Top Performing
Funds of 2010
|
Ranking
|
Industry
|
Return
|
|
1.
|
Precious Metals
|
41.56%
|
|
2.
|
Industrials
|
29.99%
|
|
3.
|
Consumer Discretionary
|
27.35%
|
|
4.
|
Real Estate
|
27.08%
|
|
5.
|
Small Growth
|
26.98%
|
|
6.
|
Small Value
|
26.17%
|
|
7.
|
Small Blend
|
25.61%
|
|
8.
|
Mid Cap Growth
|
24.61%
|
|
9.
|
Small/Mid Growth
|
23.04%
|
|
10.
|
Mid Cap Blend
|
22.52%
|
|
11.
|
Mid Cap Value
|
21.92%
|
|
12.
|
Foreign Small/Mid Value
|
21%
|
|
13.
|
Technology
|
20%
|
|
14.
|
Communications
|
19.92%
|
|
15.
|
Miscellaneous
|
19.74%
|
|
16.
|
Emerging Markets
|
19.26%
|
|
17.
|
Consumer Staples
|
18.99%
|
|
18.
|
Pacific/Asia ex-Japan
|
18.77%
|
|
19.
|
Natural Resources
|
18.06%
|
|
20.
|
Global Real Estate
|
17.22%
|
|
21.
|
Energy
|
17.14%
|
|
22.
|
Convertibles
|
16.77%
|
|
23.
|
Diversified Pacific/Asia
|
16.57%
|
|
24.
|
Commodities
|
16.03%
|
|
25.
|
Large Growth
|
15.53%
|
|
26.
|
Latin America
|
15.45%
|
|
27.
|
Foreign Large Growth
|
14.78%
|
|
32.
|
High Yield Bond
|
14.24%
|
|
35.
|
Large Cap Value
|
13.66%
|
Source: 2011
© Morningstar, Inc.
Muni bond funds
were the worst area of the market to be in, and that continues to
be the case in 2011.
Worst
Performing Funds
|
Industry
|
Return
|
|
Muni Bond
|
1.00-1.77%
|
|
Currency
|
-0.02%
|
|
Bear Market
|
-24.28%
|
Source: 2011
© Morningstar, Inc.
Large Caps
Finally,
it’s important to note that NASDAQ scored 69% gains over the last
two years compared to only 31% for the former leading Blue Chip
Index, the Dow Jones Industrial Average. NASDAQ is hot for a number
of reasons – stronger revenue, emerging markets (like smart phones
and Internet) and less debt. As you can see from the vintage article
below (from November 2006), the trend of NASDAQ
beating the DOW handily was already visible in the crystal ball
five years ago. Check out the headline article in this ezine entitled,
"Big
Bites Out of Apple and Google" for an updated analysis of
NASDAQ versus the DJIA.
Wow!
Dow! Or NASDAQ Now? By Natalie Pace. A Contrast
in Cash and Debt.
Come to a Get
Rich and Enrich Retreat and I’ll show you how to: 1.
diversify your nest egg, 2. rebalance at least once a year, 3. use
my 3-ingredient recipe for cooking up profits in real estate, stocks,
bonds, and more, 4. get safe from bonds and bond funds, and 5. use
limit orders to place profit-taking on auto-pilot! Call 866-476-7442
to register now. Deborah, who attended the November 2010 retreat,
made back the price of her tuition in just one month!
Investor
Alerts:
1. OPEC:
On October 14, 2010, OPEC released a press
release stating that they had agreed upon a new "long term
strategy." The details of that strategy were scheduled to be released
at the December 11, 2010 OPEC meeting in Quito, Ecuador, but were
not. OPEC never responded to my inquiry requesting details and/or
the summary of the new LTS (which was sent on December 11, 2010).
There is speculation that the strategy will be going from the U.S.
dollar valuation to a "basket of currency." If that occurs, it will
likely be distressing to investors, which OPEC and government leaders
are completely aware of. Watch and wait, but definitely be aware
of the potential.
2. Debt:
Refer to the CIA’s
World Fact Book for a listing of debt to GDP ratio by country.
The U.S. isn’t in the worst shape, but we are adding to the deficit
every year and approaching levels that were problematic for PIIGS
(Portugal, Ireland, Italy, Greece and Spain), Japan and other countries.
Current debt to GDP (excluding $4.5 billion held by our federal
government) was 63.6% in 2010, according to the U.S. Office
of Management and Budget.
3. Real Estate:
There
were 2.9 million foreclosure filings in 2010. Foreclosures in
2009 were 2.8 million, with 2.3 million in 2008 and 1.3 million
in 2007. 13 million homes could be lost before this real estate
correction is over. This likely means that there will not be much
upside in real estate values until beyond 2012, although low interest
rates could make a real estate purchase desirable. According to
a SIGTARP report on January 26, 2011, As of December 31, 2010, a
total of 673,919 mortgages were undergoing modification, either
permanently or on a trial basis, under HAMP. Of those, 521,630 were
active permanent modifications and 152,289 were active trial modifications.
4. 911 Investor
Alert: Bonds: Inflation
and interest rates have yet to weigh on the bond market (preview
of coming attractions), however debt has already begun to take its
toll. Don’t be suckered into muni bonds or any other bond before
examining a full accounting of the debt load of the entity and the
fiscal health/capacity to make good on the bond. There were multiple
articles in 2010 on bonds. Peruse the archives and read all of them!
5. Gold:
The International Monetary Fund will be selling up
to 191.3 metric tons of gold on the open market, a policy they announced
(and began) in February of 2010. For a brief history of gold and
information on which countries are the biggest holders of gold,
read, "The Gold Crash of 1980," from the September 2010 ezine, volume
7, issue 9.
http://www.nataliepace.com/newsletters/members/news.php?np=yes&issue=709/709&article=02
So
is There Anything Good Out There?
Yes,
believe it or not, there are some excellent areas in the economy.
My 2009 Company of the Year, U.S. Gold has posted up to 15X gains.
13 out of 14 Companies featured in my Company of the Month articles
in 2010 were winners. Your nest egg has almost fully recovered from
the Great Recession. If you have a great credit rating and can get
a loan, there are areas of the country where you can buy cash positive,
low risk income property. And even if you’re in trouble, in doubt,
losing a home or declaring bankruptcy, there are some very important
things to do to squirrel away as many assets as possible. The best
way to learn about these things is to read this ezine top to bottom,
read You
Vs. Wall Street and register to attend the next
Get
Rich and Enrich Retreat. Once you have wisdom and education
that you should have received in high school, all of this will be
easy and can be set up on auto-pilot. Until then, you are vulnerable
to more boom/bust markets.
The Get
Rich and Enrich Retreat is a great way to have a blast
in the sunny beach town of Santa Monica. What a great, empowering
vacation! There are only a handful of seats available in this intimate,
12-person, boardroom retreat, so if you’re interested call 866-476-7442
or email Heather@NataliePace.com
right away. Get more information on the home page at NataliePace.com
under the Get Rich and Enrich Retreat banner ad.
Banks Are
Still Failing
There
were 157 bank failures in 2010, 140 bank failures in 2009 and 25
in 2008. 7 banks have already failed in the first few days of 2011
(source: FDIC.gov). Don’t be seduced by the banks reporting record
earnings! Most of them are fairy tales. (Nonproducing loans are
carried off the books; TARP and other Federal Reserve swaps are
about as easy to figure out as the origin of the life.) However,
the $600 billion that the Federal Reserve is putting in the bank
coffers between November 2010 and May 2011 should help their earnings
reports shine up real nice. Meanwhile foreclosures were 2.9 million
in 2010, with 2.25 million expected in 2011 and 2 million projected
for 2012. Ouch… 14 million homes will be lost between 2007 and 2012
and not all of them hitting the financial statements with as much
force as they should...
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
before, during and after the Great Recession – in bear and bull
market years. 95 positions listed below – 80% -- have delivered
impressive gains over the past two years, even while the Dow Jones
Industrial Average is still trading lower than it was in 2007 (when
it cracked through 14,000)! Only twenty-four of our listings
went in the opposite direction of the reporting, which is quite
impressive given the market gyrations of more than 7000 point swings
since 2008.
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 trading profits early and often in these volatile, whip-sawing
years. (Your nest egg is better off just rebalancing once or twice
a year, not trying to market time.)
4 out
of 7 Company of the Year selections more than doubled. My
2003, 2004, 2006, 2007 and 2009 Companies of the Year posted up
to 9000% gains (Taser), up to 690% gains (Opsware), up to 215% gains
(Suntech Power Holdings), and up to 15X ROI for U.S. Gold, respectively.
MySpace, my 2006 Company of the Year, was a large part of News Corp’s
success with shareholders that year. So five out of seven
Company of the Year selections were superperformers. 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, Taser International, on 1.1.03.)
Some of my best
picks include: U.S. Gold (UXG) 15X return on investment, Google
(GOOG) +585%, Opsware (OPSW) +690%, Rio Tinto (RTP) +145%, Sohu
(SOHU) +150%, Suntech Power Holdings (STP) +107%, Taser (TASR) up
to 9000% gains. 13 out of 14 companies featured in the Company
of the Month articles in 2010 earned gains – 93%!
The NataliePace.com
ezine was the first to list the following 911 alerts:
- 2008
Recession
(Get Safe)
- Trim back
on Faded
Blue Chips in 2006
- Get out of
Dodge (real
estate) in 2005
- Google
at the IPO! (May 2004)
- To get Fannie
Mae and Freddie Mac out of your 401(k) in 2003
Market
Movers:
The
Federal Open Market Committee and Monetary Policy
The Fed funds
rate continues to be "0 to ¼ percent." The next FOMC meeting takes
place on March 15, 2011.
GDP Growth
Rates: Advance estimates of 4th quarter 2010
GDP growth came in at 3.2%. 2nd estimates will be released
on February 25, 2011 at 8:30 a.m. ET. Third estimate GDP growth
rate for 3Q 2010 was 2.6%. 2Q 2010 GDP growth was 1.7%. 1Q
2010 GDP growth was 3.7%.
These release
days tend to be very active on Wall Street. For more information
on GDP growth and other important economic statistics, go to the
BEA.gov
website and be sure to visit the NataliePace.com calendar
section often.
EDUCATIONAL
OPPORTUNITES AND INFORMATION:
- FOMC
Information: Interested in reading the press
release of the January 25-26, 2011 FOMC meeting for yourself?
You can. The official Federal Reserve document is available online.
Go to FederalReserve.gov to read! According to the Committee,
"The economic recovery is continuing, though at a rate that has
been insufficient to bring about a significant improvement in
labor market conditions... Although commodity prices have risen,
longer-term inflation expectations have remained stable, and measures
of underlying inflation have been trending downward."
The tentative
FOMC meeting schedule for the 2010-2011 calendar is: March 15, 2011
(Tuesday), April 26-27, 2011 (Tues.-Wed.), June 21-22, 2011 (Tues.-Wed.),
August 9, 2011 (Tuesday), September 20, 2011 (Tuesday), Nov. 1-2,
2011 (Tues.-Wed.), December 13, 2011 (Tuesday), January 24-25, 2012
(Tues.-Wed.).
2.
Calendar
Section: Conferences, Online Chats and more:
Check out the Calendar section of NataliePace.com regularly. You
will find great opportunities to attend the most exclusive business
and Green Conferences, learn about upcoming TV and radio shows and
other educational opportunities – many are FREE! 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 Pace and Prosperity Show with Natalie Pace on BlogTalkRadio.com.
Check BlogTalkRadio.com/NataliePace
for upcoming shows and call-in and log-on instructions and to listen
back to any shows that you might have missed. These shows are pod
casts and are FREE!
BlogTalkRadio
offers a Q&A format, where you can call in with your most pressing
questions. Be sure to keep a list of your questions as they come
up, and join our ongoing dialog on peace and prosperity, getting
rich and enriching, green investing, the Thrive Budget and more
on Facebook at http://www.facebook.com/NWPace.
3.
Survey
Results:
Each month we have three new surveys so that we can stay in touch
with your needs and desires. This month, we want to get the holiday
gift giving right! Cast your vote on our survey page.
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 are scheduled for February 3, 2011 at 2:30 p.m. CET.
(February 17, 2011 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.
Cree
(CREE) added on 1.20.11
MEMC Electronics (WFR) added on 1.31.11
Profit-Taking:
Hoku Corp.
(HOKU) +25%
LDK
Solar (LDK) +149%
U.S. Gold (UXG) 13X ROI
DELETIONS
(Take your profits early and often):
Advanced
Materials (AMAT) on 1.14.11
Kulicke
and Soffa Ind. (KLIC) 12.1.10
HOT NEWS
on COOL STOCKS LIST
| Company
|
NP
owns? |
Symbol
|
Price
when featured |
Price
1.28.11
|
Year High
Year Low
|
Gains
since original feature |
|
Cree
|
Yes
|
CREE
|
$52.10
(1.20.11)
|
$50.78
|
$83.38
$31.12
|
-3%
|
|
Read "LED
Lighting," from the
August 1, 2010 ezine, Vol. 7, issue 8. Love the company. Revenue
growth is solid. Sales to Asia are strong. Future likes bright!
And the price is finally right. Note by email on addition
back to the list.
|
|
ENER1
|
No
|
HEV
|
$3.68
|
$3.85
|
$5.36
$2.75
|
+5%
|
|
Read "Life
Begins with Li (Lithium"
from Vol. 6, issue 4. Ener1 develops and manufactures compact,
high performance lithium-ion batteries to power the next generation
of hybrid, plug-in hybrid and pure electric vehicles.
On 1.18.11: Ener1
announced a JV deal with Wanxiang Electric Vehicle Co. to
produce 40,000 battery backs in China by 2014. ENER1 owns
40% of the venture and will contribute intellectual property
and technical expertise. Wanxiang will contribute the factory
and labor (in China). China has set a target to produce 500,000
electric vehicles by the end of t2012, so the tea leaves look
very favorable for ENER1.
3Q earnings on Nov. 4, 2010. Net
sales were $17.3 million in the third quarter of 2010, an
increase of 113% over net sales of $8.1 million in the third
quarter of 2009.
Ener1 signed a $40 million supply
agreement with a wholly-owned subsidiary of the Federal Grid
Company (MICEX: FEES) for a bulk energy storage program. Systems
will be delivered and installed at the end of the first quarter
in 2011 and commissioned in the second quarter of 2011. $36
million of revenue is expected to be recognized in the first
half of 2011, $4 million of revenue in 2012. Basic and
diluted net loss per share was $0.18 in the third quarter
of 2010 compared to $0.14 in the third quarter of 2009.
9.23.10: Ener1 Group has purchased
5,665,723 shares of common stock and 2,426,670 million warrants.
The warrants, 910,000 of which are exercisable into Ener1,
Inc. common stock at a strike price of $3.53, and 1,516,670
at a strike price of $4.46, have a five-year maturity.
"Applying our advanced battery
technology will enable us to hit the ground running in serving
what is potentially the largest advanced battery market in
the world," Charles Gassenheimer, Ener1’s chairman and chief
executive officer, said in the statement.
|
|
Federated Prudent Bear Fund
|
No
|
BEARX
|
$5.26
|
$4.61
|
$8.19
$4.99
|
-14%
|
|
The Prudent Bear Fund operates
in the opposite direction of the market. When the markets
rise, the fund share price decreases. Then the stock market
falls, the Bear Fund share price increases in value.
|
|
Hoku Scientific
Hawaii
RISK: HIGH
|
Yes
|
HOKU
|
$8.03
$2.00
(3.2.09)
|
$2.49
|
$14.55
$1.90
|
-69% &
+25%
|
|
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.
2Q 2010 earnings on 11.4.10: Revenues
for the quarters ended September 30, 2010 and 2009 were $1.2
million and $1.5 million, respectively. Net loss was $2.0
million, or $0.04 per diluted share.
Summarizing the Company's progress
during the quarter, Scott Paul, president and chief executive
officer of Hoku
Corporation, said, "We continued executing on our business
plan during the past quarter -- growing Hoku Solar's market
share as a turnkey PV integrator and solar project developer,
and progressing toward Hoku Materials' goal of commissioning
its polysilicon plant in Pocatello, Idaho. With the backing
of Tianwei New Energy Holdings Co., Ltd., our majority stockholder,
we secured additional debt financing from China Merchants
Bank and China Construction Bank, allowing us to push forward
with our construction efforts at our polysilicon plant."
Hoku’s Chief Technology Officer
and co-founder Karl Taft resigned on 11.16.10.
|
|
LDK Solar
GREEN
|
Yes
|
LDK
|
$30.02
$4.94
(3.2.09)
|
$12.28
|
$15.10
$4.97
|
-59% &
+149%
|
|
Read the articles, "Green"
in Vol. 6, issue 2 and "Solar
Springs Up Again," in Vol. 5, issue
4.
LDK is benefitting from lots of
press on China’s renewable energy policy.
On 11.24.10: LDK announced an offer
to swap existing Convertible Senior Notes due 2013 for a new
series at the same rate of 4.75% and cash between $60 and
$85. Approximately $395 million in aggregate principal amount
of the Existing Notes are outstanding. LDK Solar is conducting
the Exchange Offer in order to reduce the aggregate principal
amount of its outstanding Existing Notes under which holders
may require LDK Solar to repurchase all or a portion of their
Existing Notes on April 15, 2011 prior to maturity.
Announced 2Q 2010 earnings on 8.10.10
at 5:00 p.m. ET (after markets close). Record quarterly revenue
of $565.3 million, an increase of 62.7% sequentially and 147.6%
year-over- year. Net income was $45.0 million, or $0.36 per
diluted ADS for the second quarter.
3Q earnings on 11.08.10: Record
quarterly revenue of $675.6 million, an increase of 19.5%
sequentially and 139.7% year-over- year; Gross margin for
the third quarter was 22.2%; Net income was $93.4 million.
"We are benefiting from our diversification
strategy as we see increasing contributions from our polysilicon,
module and cell businesses. As we gain further traction
in these areas, we expect to experience enhanced top line
and earnings growth," according to Xiaofeng Peng, Chairman
and CEO of LDK Solar.
|
|
MEMC Electronics
|
No
|
WFR
|
$11.99
|
$11.00
|
$19.31
$9.19
|
-8%
|
|
Read "The
Sunny Side" Vol. 6, issue 3. 3Q results were
released on Nov. 1, 2010 at 5:30 p.m. ET. Ahmad Chatila, Chief
Executive Officer, and Tim Oliver, Chief Financial Officer
will lead the call.
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.
3Q results:
GAAP net sales for the quarter were $503.1 million, up 12.2%
from $448.3 million in the 2010 second quarter and up 62.3%
from $310.0 million in the 2009 third quarter. MEMC's GAAP
net income for the 2010 third quarter was $17.6 million, or
$0.08 per share, compared to a net income of $13.8 million,
or $0.06 per share, in the 2010 second quarter and a net loss
of $64.6 million, or $0.29 per share, in the 2009 third quarter.
"Our third
quarter results extended our recent trend of steady improvement,"
said Ahmad Chatila, MEMC's Chief Executive Officer. "While
our end markets are dynamic, we continue to improve our execution,
while continuing with strategic initiatives that will catalyze
our growth in 2011 and beyond."
|
|
Sunpower
|
No
|
SPWRA
|
$24.83
$13.07 (7.1.10)
|
$13.21
|
$34.00
$10.11
|
-47% &
+1%
|
|
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.
Announced 3Q 2010 earnings on November
11, 2010: revenue of $551 million vs. $384 million in Q2 2010.
" For 2011, we continue to
see more demand than supply inour growing Utility and Power
Plants (UPP) and Residential and Commercial (R&C) businesses.
Operationally, our Fab 3 joint venture completed initial
solar cell production tests, achieving conversion efficiencies
of more than 22% and we remain on plan for our 2011 cost reduction
programs across the value chain," said Tom Werner, SunPower's
CEO.
Major recent milestones include:
- Completed sale of 28 megawatts
(MW) of Italian power plants
- Commenced marketing for approximately
euro 200 million of project debt for final phases of the
Montalto solar park
- Awarded 10-MW contract from
LS Power to build largest solar plant in Delaware
- Announced the availability of
the company's Oasis power plant block in Europe
- Announced more than 20 MW of
federal government projects in Q3
- Awarded largest single roof
top contract in the U.S. – 3.5 MW for Macy's in Arizona
- Completed initial cell production
at company's 1,400 MW Fab 3 joint venture with AU Optronics
2011 guidance was issued on 11.18.10.
-- 2011 GAAP revenue of $2.65 -
$2.85 billion
-- 2011 GAAP gross margin of 19%-21%, Non-GAAP gross margin
of 20%-22%
-- 2011 GAAP EPS of $0.35-$0.65, 2011 non-GAAP EPS of $1.75
- $2.05
SunPower also announced today that
Allianz Renewable Energy Partners IV Ltd. (a wholly owned
subsidiary of Allianz SE) has signed a definitive sale and
purchase agreement to acquire 100 percent of the equity in
SunPower's wholly owned subsidiary, Orsa Maggiore PV Srl,
which owns the 15-megawatt (MWp) Solare Roma photovoltaic
power plant. SunPower designed and is building the power plant
and will provide ongoing operations and maintenance services
for the new owner.
|
|
Suntech Power Holdings
|
No
|
STP
|
$14.26
$7.24
(12.1.10)
|
$8.30
|
$49.60
$5.09
|
-42% &
+15%
|
|
Read
"The
Sunny Side"
Vol. 6, issue 3. The world's largest crystalline silicon photovoltaic
(PV) module manufacturer. 3Q will be announced Nov. 17 before
the markets open.
Suntech began manufacturing in
the US on Oct. 8, 2010.
3Q 2010 earnings were reported
on November 17, 2010.
Total net revenues were $743.7
million in the third quarter of 2010, representing growth
of 19.0% sequentially and 57.2% year-over-year. GAAP net income
attributable to holders of ordinary shares was $33.1 million.
"The third quarter was a highly
productive period for Suntech," said Dr. Zhengrong Shi, Chairman
and CEO. "Shipments and revenues each hit new quarterly
records and we reached production capacity of 1.6GW. We are
on track to achieve our goal of 1.8GW cell and module capacity
by the end of this year."
"In the third quarter, we continued
to diversify our sales globally and participated in high profile
solar projects across Europe, the Americas, and Asia Pacific.
In Europe, we supplied a 5MW project in Thiva, which is one
of the largest grid connected solar projects in Greece. In
Asia Pacific, we were selected for phase two of a 44MW project
in Thailand. And we recently opened our module manufacturing
facility in Goodyear, Arizona, which will help us to service
the accelerating demand in the Americas. Indicative
of our rapid market penetration, we sold more product in the
Americas in the third quarter of 2010 than we did in the full
year 2009," Dr. Shi continued.
"We are also pleased to announce
we are in the process of extending our vertical integration
into the wafer segment of the solar value chain. As we expand
our internal wafer manufacturing capacity, we are confident
we will have an improving earnings profile as we benefit from
lower wafer cost. Upstream integration is in line with Suntech's
strategy to continue to reduce the cost of solar energy and
stimulate greater global adoption of clean, renewable energy,"
said Dr. Shi.
|
|
U.S. Gold
Colorado USA
RISK: VERY HIGH
Company of the Year 2009
|
Yes
|
UXG
|
$5.05
$.50 (10.20.08)
$2.66 (10.09)
|
$6.57
|
$5.52
$2.02
|
+30% &
13X &
+147%
|
|
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.
As you can see, U.S. Gold has been
a super performer this year. And the news on Forbes.com, TheStreet.com
and Motley Fool is starting to heat up. Expect more as Junior
Gold Miners capture headlines on strong gains in share price
(largely due to the world’s current infatuation with gold).
U.S. Gold begins trading on the
New York Stock Exchange on Nov. 2, 2010, and has a goal of
qualifying for the S&P 500 by 2015. Added to the S&P/TSX
Global Gold Index and S&P/TSX Global Mining Index on 9.15.09.
Added to the Chicago Board of Options Exchange on July 19,
2010. Began trading on the AMEX stock exchange on 12.11.06.
(Also trades on the Toronto Stock Exchange.)
If you believe in this CEO and
company, you’ll want to make sure you have shares of U.S.
Gold going forward (at the right price of course). Gold should
be a great hedge against inflation, which is predicted to
become an issue once the inflation and debt concerns heat
up (2011 and forward). Right now, the Feds are still a little
concerned about deflation in consumer goods, but inflation
is already here in commodities.
This is an exploration company,
not a mining company. They don’t produce gold at this time.
However, in a September 2010 interview on TheStreet
TV, Rob
McEwen said that becoming a gold producer is part of the plan.
They have silver reserves in Mexico and gold reserves
in Nevada. The most recent exploration updates are in the
press release section of the company website at USGold.com.
Listen to my feature interview
with CEO
and Chairman Rob McEwen
on BlogTalkRadio.com.
You can review my original Q&A with Rob
McEwen and interview
on U.S. Gold in Vol. 3, issue 2. (Feb. 2006)
|
Deleted
Companies 2008-2011:
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 12.1.08
and 1.14.09. MEMC Electronics (WFR) had 21% gains between 12.1.08
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%. Deleted the New Zealand dollar currency ETF by
Wisdom Tree with 36% gains on 12.12.09. 12.18.09:
Deleted Ener1 with 22% gains and Satcon with 29% gains. Deleted
1.11.10: KCI with 88% gains! Deleted 8.1.10:
Galaxy Resources with 48% and 9% returns and Rio Tinto with 21%
gains. Deleted 9.13.10: American Superconductor (flat)
& AOL (flat). 10.1.10: Blockbuster busted out
in bankruptcy on 9.28.10. KLAC was deleted with 11% gains. 10.15.10:
ENER1 was deleted with flat performance. 11.11.10: ENER1 was deleted
with 37% gains. VECO was deleted with 2% & 41% gains. 12.1.10:
KLIC was deleted with 12% gains. 1.14.11: Advanced Materials was
deleted with 30% gains.
Recently
Deleted from the Hot News list:
Applied
Materials (AMAT) 1.14.11
Kulicke & Soffa on 12.1.10
|
Applied Materials
2010 Company of the Year
|
No
|
AMAT
|
$11.80
|
$15.32
|
$14.94
$10.27
|
+30%
|
|
Read "Let
There Be Light" and "LED
Lighting," from
the December 1, 2010 and August 1, 2010 ezines, Vol. 7, issue
12 and 8. 2010 Company of the Year!
|
|
Kulicke and Soffa Ind.
|
No
|
KLIC
|
$6.72
$5.98 (11.15.10)
|
$6.68
|
$9.58
$4.03
|
Flat &
+12%
|
|
Read "Let
There Be Light"
and "LED
Lighting," from
the December 1, 2010 and August 1, 2010 ezines, Vol. 7, issue
12 and 8. 2010 Company of the Year!
11.10.10 earnings report: 4Q 2010
revenue was $259.3 million – 135% higher than last year. Net
income was $56 million, 872% higher than last year, with a
net profit margin of 21.6%. HOWEVER, the company has a new
CEO & CFO, is moving offices to Singapore and offered
earnings guidance of $125 million – down almost 50% from the
4th quarter. Yikes! As might be expected, there
is consensus, colossal insider selling…
"Looking forward to the December
quarter we forecast revenue to be in the $125 million to $135
million range." Bruno Guilmart, President and Chief Executive
Officer… According to the WSJ, "Guilmart cited plans by customers
to reduce capital spending in the December quarter, pushing
orders out to the March and June quarters." Missing earnings
by such a wide margin could be a big deal when the 1Q 2011
earnings are announced in the first week of February 2011.
Consensus colossal insider selling
on Nov. 4, 2010.
|
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.
Getting the price right is as important as picking the right company.
Never pay retail!
Recent
Additions:
American
Superconductor (AMSC) nearing 52-week low on 1.31.11
Applied Materials (AMAT) on 1.14.11
PowerShares Emerging Markets Index (PIE) on 1.14.11
Tesla (TSLA) on 1.14.11
Recent
Deletions:
ENER1
(HEV) (moved to Hot List on 1.14.11)
Cree
(CREE) (moved to Hot List on 1.20.11)
| Company
|
NP
owns? |
Symbol
|
Price
when featured |
Price
1.28.11
|
Year High
Year Low
|
Gains
since original feature |
| Allscripts Misys Healthcare
Solutions |
No |
MDRX |
$19.94 |
$20.84 |
$22.55
$9.70
|
+5% |
| Read
"Health
Care Reform"
Vol. 7, issue 4. In a press release dated July 27, 2010, Allscripts
announced that the company is merging with Eclipsys. As part
of the merger, the company is issuing 25 million new shares
in a secondary offering that is priced at $16.50/share. (Makes
us glad we didn’t put this on the Hot List at $20/share!) Shareholders
must approve on August 13, 2010. Framework Agreement was dated
June 9, 2010. |
| Altair Nano-technology
|
No |
ALTI |
$4.54 |
$2.60 |
$3.84
$1.22
|
-43% |
|
Read
"Life
Begins with Li (Lithium)" Vol. 6,
issue 4. Altair did a 4:1 reverse split on Nov. 4, 2010.
A company spokesperson confirmed
on 11.29.10 that Altair is in compliance with NASDAQ now.
3Q earnings on November 4, 2010
at 11 a.m. ET.
Financial Highlights for third
quarter 2010 compared to third quarter 2009
- Revenue of $2.0 million compared
to $1.7 million.
- Gross margin of $0.5 million
compared to $1.1 million.
- Operating expenses of $5.8 million
compared to $5.3 million.
- Net loss of $5.3 million compared
to $3.3 million.
Altairnano's cash and cash equivalents
decreased by $0.7 million, from $8.2 million at June 30, 2010
to $7.5 million at September 30, 2010.
"In the third quarter we took a
major step forward in securing our financial future. In September,
we entered into a Share Subscription Agreement with Canon
Investment Holdings whereby they will invest $48.9 million
into the company in return for a controlling interest. We
also signed a concurrent supply and license agreement with
Zhuhai Yintong Energy Co. Ltd., a subsidiary of Canon, that
provides access to the vast Chinese market," said Dr. Terry
Copeland, Altairnano's president and CEO. "We are excited
about the potential that the Canon and YTE relationship creates
for both of our companies."
|
| American
Super-conductor |
No |
AMSC
|
$29.62 |
$27.39 |
$43.73
$8.22
|
-8% |
|
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." President
Obama mentioned American Superconductor by name in his weekly
address of Nov. 21, 2009. In the official transcript, it is
written: "If we can increase our exports to Asia Pacific nations
by just 5%, we can increase the number of American jobs supported
by these exports by hundreds of thousands. This is already
happening with businesses like American Superconductor Corporation,
an energy technology startup based in Massachusetts that’s
been providing wind power and smart grid systems to countries
like China, Korea, and India. By doing so, it’s added
more than 100 jobs over the last few years."
AMSC raised
an additional $155-$178 million on Nov. 16, 2010 by selling
4.6-5 million shares at $35.50 each, meaning the current price
of $27 is nearing a great buy range. We’ll add back to the
Hot News list in the $24.00 price range.
|
| AOL |
No |
AOL |
$23.11 |
$23.82 |
$29.45
$19.61
|
+3% |
|
Read "AOL"
from Vol. 6, issue 12.
AOL announced 3Q results on Nov.
3, 2010. Revenue was $564 million, down 26% from a year ago.
Net income was $172 million. (Net loss was $1 billion in 2Q
2010.)
AOL renewed and expanded its global
partnership with Google for the provision of search services
to AOL Properties. AOL and Google agreed to work
to expand the partnership to include mobile search and
Google will feature AOL content on YouTube.
AOL (and its properties including
Moviefone and Mapquest) is in the top 10 trafficked sites
in the U.S., next to Google, Microsoft, Yahoo, Facebook, eBay,
News Corp. and Interactive Corp. The fairly new CEO is a former
key player in Google’s massive growth. Can the company create
money out of traffic?
"AOL is working hard to redefine
the consumer experience on the internet,"said Tim Armstrong,
Chairman and Chief Executive Officer. "In Q3, AOL continued
on the path towards better health through targeted acquisitions
and smart dispositions, meaningful product improvements, site
relaunches, and strategic partnerships, all of which will
enable us to execute more quickly against our strategy."
At September 30, 2010, AOL had
$623.3 million of cash. Q3 2010 cash provided by continuing
operations was $165.0 million, down 2.5% year-over-year, while
Free Cash Flow was $130.8 million, up 4.4% year-over-year.
|
|
Applied Materials
2010 Company of the Year
|
No |
AMAT |
$15.32 |
$15.77 |
$14.94
$10.27
|
+3% |
| Read
"Let
There Be Light" and "LED
Lighting," from
the December 1, 2010 and August 1, 2010 ezines, Vol. 7, issue
12 and 8. 2010 Company of the Year! |
| iShares Australia Index |
No |
EWA |
$20.34 |
$24.57 |
$26.36
$15.40
|
+21% |
| Read
"Hot
Funds," from Vol.
7, issue 7. |
| Big Lots |
No |
BIG |
$30.28 |
$31.82 |
$41.42
$19.49
|
+5% |
| Read
"Discount
Designer Stores,"
from Vol. 5, issue 6. |
|
Canadian Imperial Bank
RISK: Medium
|
No |
CM |
$65.88 |
$75.71 |
$108.79
$30.64
|
+15% |
| 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 in 2009; Australia was #2. |
|
Citigroup
RISK: HIGH
|
No
|
C
|
$2.26 |
$4.72 |
$5.43
$2.55
|
+109% |
|
One of the troubled, bailed out
banks…
It’s important to remember that
we don’t really have a clue how deep and wide the losses at
these bailed out banks are. Most of this is still hidden and
the Feds are not releasing the info, nor are the banks…
|
| Eldorado
Gold |
No
|
EGO |
$10.56 |
$16.41
|
$20.23
$7.65
|
+55% |
|
Read "Investing
in Gold" from
Vol. 6, issue 9.
Eldorado is a gold producing, exploration
and development company actively growing businesses in Brazil
China, Greece, and Turkey and surrounding regions. We are
one of the lowest cost pure gold producers.
|
| iShares
Emerging Markets Index |
No
|
EEM
|
$39.58
|
$45.33
|
$48.62
$30.30
|
+15%
|
| Read
"Hot
Funds," from Vol.
7, issue 7. |
| iShares
JPMorgan Emerging Markets Index |
No
|
EMB
|
$104.63
|
$105.85
|
$114.14
$92.42
|
+1%
|
| Read
"Hot
Funds," from Vol.
7, issue 7. |
| PowerShares
Emerging Markets Index |
No
|
PIE
|
$18.46
|
$17.07
|
$18.83
$0.10
|
-8% |
| Read
"Hot
Funds," from Vol. 7,
issue 7. |
| First Solar
|
No |
FSLR
|
$144.76
|
$147.49
|
$163.32
$98.71
|
+2%
|
|
See "Solar
Springs Up Again,"
article in Vol. 5, issue 4.
First Solar joined S&P500 on
10.02.09.
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. They still list CdTe as the semiconductor
of choice on their website, citing old data from 2004 that
this is a good strategy. Be forewarned!
|
| FMC Corp. |
No
|
FMC |
$51.36 |
$75.01 |
$79.67
$49.25
|
+46% |
|
Read "Life
Begins with Li (Lithium)"
from Vol. 6, issue 4 and "Should
You Put the Brakes on Toyota?,"
from Vol. 7, issue 2.
2Q 2010 earnings announced on 11.2.10:
FMC Corporation reported net income of $82.9 million, or $1.13
per diluted share, in the third quarter of 2010, versus net
income of $28.0 million, or $0.38 per diluted share, in the
third quarter of 2009. Excluding one-time charges in both
periods, the company earned $1.14 per diluted share in the
current quarter, an increase of 28 percent versus $0.89 per
diluted share in the prior-year quarter. Third quarter
revenue of $772.5 million was 8 percent higher than $713.3
million in the prior year.
FMC is the real winner of the stimulus
package because they supply lithium to the battery makers.
On the other hand, that is not all that this company manufactures,
and sales were off in 2009. Waiting for a better buy-in point.
|
|
Galaxy Resources
RISK: HIGH
(off the boards, thinly traded)
|
No |
GALXF |
$1.17 |
$1.65
|
$1.80
$0.79
|
+41%
|
| Read
"Should
You Put the Brakes on Toyota?"
from Vol. 7, issue 2. Lithium exploration, mining, etc. in Australia
and China. Traded off the boards in the US, but is listed on
the Australia Stock Exchange. Milestones for the extraction
plant in Australia and the lithium processing plant in China
are on schedule. Looking good. You can read an update on Milestones
on the Galaxy
Resources website.
The markets could take the share price lower still, but Galaxy
has two strong components – Australia-based company in an emerging
market – lithium. |
| General
Motors |
No
|
GM
|
$33.11
|
$36.60
|
$39.48
$33.07
|
+11% |
| Read
"One
Very Hot IPO,"
from the September 1, 2010 ezine, Vol. 7, issue 9. According
to a Reuters report on Nov. 1, 2010, the "road show" for investors
will begin after the Nov. 2, 2010 election. Once that is completed,
the company will list their shares on the NYSE, expect developing
news this month. |
| Green Dot
|
No
|
GDOT
|
$41.14
|
$63.16 |
$65.10
$41.13
|
+54% |
|
Read "IPO
of the Year"
from Vol. 7, issue 3.
On 9.20.10, the Los Angeles Business
Journal named Green Dot CFO John Keatley CFO of the Year.
$100 million public offering of
shares of Class A common stock is in the planning stages,
as of Nov. 8, 2010. All shares will be offered by existing
stockholders. The number of shares to be offered in the offering
has not yet been determined.
3Q 2010 Earnings (Nov. 3, 2010):
Total operating revenues on a generally accepted accounting
principles (GAAP) basis increased 36% to $88.9 million for
the third quarter of 2010 from $65.3 million for the third
quarter of 2009. GAAP net income decreased 14% to $9.0 million
for the third quarter of 2010 from $10.5 million for the third
quarter of 2009.
|
| KLA Tencor
|
No
|
KLAC
|
$37.19
|
$43.69
|
$45.99
$26.69
|
+18% |
| Read
"LED
Lighting," from
the August 1, 2010 ezine, Vol. 7, issue 8. |
| iShares
S&P Latin America 40 Index Fund |
No
|
ILF
|
$43.92
|
$50.66
|
$54.87
$30.74
|
+15%
|
| Read
"Hot
Funds," from Vol.
7, issue 7. |
| PowerShares
Lux Nanotech |
No
|
PXN
|
$9.80
|
$9.86 |
$10.85
$7.74
|
flat
|
| Potential
hot industry for your pie chart. |
| Orocobre
|
No
|
OROCF
|
$1.70
|
$3.40 |
$4.03
$0.99
|
100% |
|
Read "Should
You Put the Brakes on Toyota?"
from Vol. 7, issue 2. This play is Australian lithium company
with a Toyota deal. Began trading on TSX (Toronto Stock Exchange)
in June of 2010.
The company is based in Brisbane,
Queensland, which is currently underwater. The company’s projects
are located in South America, so it’s possible that the floods
won’t impact this company severely. Lithium production isn’t
projected to begin until 2012.
|
| iShares
MSCI All Peru Index Fund |
No
|
EPU
|
$34.69
|
$48.72
|
$49.97
$27.19
|
+40%
|
| Read
"Hot
Funds," from Vol.
7, issue 7. |
| PowerShares
Wilderhill Clean Energy ETF |
No
|
PBW
|
$9.78
|
$10.38
|
$11.95
$4.00
|
+11%
|
| Read
"The
Sunny Side" Vol. 6, issue 3. |
| Rio Tinto
|
No
|
RIO |
$54.60
|
$68.03 |
$73.00
$39.30
|
+25% |
| Gold,
copper and other commodities mining. Based out of UK. Mines
worldwide, but focused greatly in Australia. Annual general
meeting is May 26, 2010 in Melbourne, Victoria. 4:1 stock split
took place on April 30, 2010. |
| Ross Stores
|
No
|
ROST
|
$35.90
|
$65.46
|
$66.58
$34.74
|
+82%
|
| Read
"Discount
Designer Stores,"
from Vol. 5, issue 6. Sales have been impressive, especially
given the "jobless recovery." |
| Shutterfly
|
No
|
SFLY |
$30.04 |
$32.81 |
$33.27
$13.76
|
+9% |
| Read
"Diamonds
or Scrapbooking,"
from the November 1, 2010 ezine, Vol. 7, issue 11. |
| Skype
|
No
|
NA |
IPO
|
IPO |
NA
|
--
|
| Read
"High
Debt Vs. High Risk,"
from the September 1, 2010 ezine, Vol. 7, issue 9. Still a-waiting
for this IPO... |
| Sociedad
Minera y Quimica de Chile |
No
|
SQM
|
$36.36
|
$57.72
|
$60.33
$30.70
|
+57%
|
|
This is a great company that
manufactures silicon for the solar and IT industry. Looking
for a better buy-in, after we get through the current down-trending
volatility.
Read the article, "Treasure
Hunting,"
in Vol. 5, issue 10 and the article "Life
Begins with Li (Lithium)," from Vol. 6,
issue 4.
3Q on November 23, 2010. Revenue
was $459.5 million, compared to $384 million a year ago. Net
income was $95 million. Cash on hand = $616 million. $1.7
billion in debt.
Businesses include: Specialty Plant
Nutrition, Iodine and Lithium.
|
|
Sohu (Chinese Co. ADR)
Beijing, China
Small Cap
RISK: MEDIUM
|
No
|
SOHU |
$46.54 |
$73.55 |
$80.94
$40.05
|
+58%
|
| Chinese
based Internet portal. |
| iShares
S&P North American Tech Semi-conductors |
No
|
IGW
|
$45.93
|
$59.33 |
$61.19
$14.03
|
+29%
|
| Read
"LED
Lighting," from
Vol. 7, issue 8. |
| Tesla
|
No
|
TSLA |
$25.75 |
$24.01 |
$36.42
$14.98
|
-7% |
|
Read "Tesla
Trades on NASDAQ"
from Vol. 7, issue 7.
Should you buy now? Very volatile
stock. Also, production is just now starting on the new lower-priced
sedan. It’s at a former Toyota factory, which places a lot
of ducks in a row, however, ramping up for production is something
that can be wrought with delays and other unexpected kinks.
Combine that with competition for the Leaf and the Volt, and
you have a more vulnerable company. The Leaf is lower-priced
and has a lot less battery power and distance. The Volt is
a hybrid, more like the Prius. However, the Volt just won
the 2011 Car of the Year Award! Another concern is that Tesla
CEO, product architect and Chairman Elon Musk is also the
CEO and CTO of SpaceX and the chairman of SolarCity.
|
| Tidewater
|
No
|
TDW |
$41.81
|
$57.98
|
$57.08
$37.99
|
+38%
|
|
Read "Clean
Up" from Vol.
7, issue 6.
2Q on Nov. 3, Revenues of $267.1
million, compared to $295.5 million a year ago. Net income
was $19.4 million, compared to $98 million a year ago.
Tidewater was the hero of the BP
oil spill. Thanks to the rapid response of Capt. Alwin Landry
and his crew of 12, the loss of life on April 20, 2010 was
limited to 11. 115 workers were rescued, cared for and shipped
110 miles to dry land. Tidewater’s share price has taken a
hit as a result of having losses from "seized assets" and
unpaid accounts receivable in Venezuela and a fine/agreement
involving a SEC investigation into U.S. Foreign Corrupt Practices
Act. Tidewater Inc. provides offshore supply vessels and marine
support services to the offshore energy industry (including
oil rigs and offshore oil drilling).
|
| Trina Solar
Ltd. |
No
|
TSL
|
$35.12
|
$25.73
|
$35.12
$11.70
|
-26%
|
|
Read "The
Sunny Side" Vol. 6, issue 3. Please
note that TSL had a 2 for 1 stock split on 1.20.10. That is
why the price looks dramatically different. Investors will
note that they should now have twice as many shares…
3Q earnings announced on Nov.
30, 2010: Solar module shipments were approximately 291
MW, exceeding the Company's previous guidance of 250 MW to
260 MW, representing an increase of 30.4% sequentially and
137.0% year-over-year. Net revenues were $508.3 million, an
increase of 37.1% sequentially and 103.5% year-over-year.
Net income was $82.9 million, which included a net foreign
currency exchange loss of $8.3 million, compared to net income
of $38.7 million in the second quarter of 2010.
Announced an agreement to supply
solar modules to SunEdison, a subsidiary of MEMC Electronic
Materials, Inc. ("MEMC"). Under the terms of the agreement
signed with MEMC, the Company is expected to supply SunEdison
with approximately 35 MW of PV modules over the remainder
of 2010
-- Announced the signing
of a Letter of Agreement with the Massachusetts Institute
of Technology ("MIT") to become a member of its Industrial
Liaison Program, a program devoted to promoting university-industry
collaboration, innovation and technology sharing
Announced management changes on
Oct. 7, 2010. Sean Tzou, Chief Strategy Officer, resigned.
Stephanie Yang Shao has joined the Company as Chief Human
Resources Officer (eff. Sept. 15, 2010).
|
| Veeco
|
No
|
VECO
|
$44.08 |
$43.24 |
$54.50
$17.88
|
-2% |
| Read
"LED
Lighting," from
the August 1, 2010 ezine, Vol. 7, issue 8. |
| Westpac
|
No
|
WBK |
$73.54 |
$112.64 |
$133.55
$68.75
|
+53% |
|
Issued it’s full-year results on
Nov. 3, 2010. Go to Westpac.com.au to access. Australian banks
fared far better than the rest of the world banks. So did
Canadian banks. P/E is good, but the price is high compared
to the 52-week trend.
Key financial highlights (comparisons
are with prior year):
• Cash earnings per share of 197.8
cents, up 21%
• Final dividend of 74 cents,
bringing fully franked total dividend to 139 cents, up 20%
• Impairment charges of $1,456
million, down 56%
• Statutory net profit of
$6,346 million, up 84%
• Cash earnings of $5,879
million, up 26%
Westpac’s Chief Executive Officer,
Gail Kelly, said: "Westpac has nearly three billion shares
on issue and over 560,000
shareholders. We are very conscious of the role we play in
the secure and stable national
banking system that underpinned Australia’s strong performance
through and after the global
financial crisis. We also know the important contribution
our shares, and particularly
our dividends, make to the retirement savings of so many Australians.
"It is in that context that I am
very pleased with this year’s result, demonstrating further
improvement in the Group’s
businesses as we move into the third year of implementing
our customer centric, multi-brand
strategy."
Net profit of $2,875 million, up
32% from a year ago.
|
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):
PIMCO
Municipal Bond Fund (MUNI)
Netflix (NFLX)
Taubman (TCO)
DELETIONS:
Tesla Motors (TSLA)
|
Company
|
NP owns?
|
Symbol
|
Price when added to Cooling
Off List
|
Price
1.28.11
|
52-week High
52-week Low
|
Gains/Loss
|
|
Amazon
|
No
|
AMZN
|
$121.00
$188.75 (1.30.11)
|
$171.14
|
$188.94
$75.41
|
+10% &
-10%
|
|
Read the article "The
High Cost of Cheap Tech Products,"
from Vol. 7, issue 7.
FY 2010 results were released on
Jan. 27, 2011:
Net sales increased 40% to $24.205
billion, compared with $24.508 billion a year ago. Net income
was 1.15 billion, with 3.35% profit margin and long-term debt
of $184 million.
69 P/E is too frothy for our taste
in a slow economy.
|
|
American Express
|
Yes
|
AXP
|
$16.98
$46.26
(12.15.09)
|
$43.86
|
$49.19
$22.00
|
+158% &
-5%
|
|
3Q 2010 earnings announced on Nov.
3, 2010.
Net income of $1.1 billion, up
71 percent from $640 million a year ago. Revenues were $7
billion, up 17% from last year.
Long term debt and "other liabilities"
has increased to $130 billion, from $111 billion at the end
of 2009. Cash has increased to $21.3 billion, from $16.6 billion.
$500 million in debt due in 2010; $5.3 billion due in 2011.
The various legal proceedings,
financial reform acts and governmental examinations brought
against AXP include a Dept. of Justice and state attorney
generals anti-trust proceeding, CARD, the Dodd-Frank Wall
Street Reform, Consumer Protection Act and more... That combined
with the consensus insider selling in the last months of 2010,
including CEO, many board directors and general counsel raise
some red flags for AXP. Most insiders were selling in the
$44/share range.
Standard & Poor’s rates AXP’s
long-term debt BBB+, stable.
Read the article "American
Express," from
Vol. 6, issue 2.
|
|
Apple Computer
|
No
|
AAPL
|
$132.07
$316.46
(10.15.10)
|
$336.10
|
$348.48
$136.32
|
+155% &
+6%
|
|
See archived ezine Vol. 4, issue
2, for the feature article, "Apple
Chips." Also
read, "The
High Cost of Cheap Tech Products"
in the July 2010 ezine, Vol. 7, issue 7.
We love this company. Want our
subscribers to be aware that the price is at the 52-week high
and could be vulnerable in a downturn. Revenue continues to
be so strong. So... how do you feel about the future of the
company, with Steve Jobs out on medical leave of absence (which
was announced on 1.17.11)?
1Q 2011 earnings were reported
on 1.18.11 and were amazing:
Apple reported record earnings
yesterday, revenue of $26.74 billion and net quarterly profit
of $6 billion, compared to $15.68 billion revenue and net
quarterly profit of $3.38 billion, a year ago.
Apple sold 4.13 million Macs during
the quarter, a 23 percent unit increase over the year-ago
quarter. The Company sold 16.24 million iPhones in the quarter,
representing 86 percent unit growth over the year-ago quarter.
Apple sold 19.45 million iPods during the quarter, representing
a seven percent unit decline from the year-ago quarter. The
Company also sold 7.33 million iPads during the quarter.
"We had a phenomenal holiday quarter
with record Mac, iPhone and iPad sales," said Steve Jobs,
Apple’s CEO. "We are firing on all cylinders and we’ve got
some exciting things in the pipeline for this year including
iPhone 4 on Verizon which customers can’t wait to get their
hands on."
Cash & short term securities:
$27 billion. No debt.
|
|
Baidu
|
No
|
BIDU
|
$18.32
$110.12
(12.15.10)
|
$106.54
|
$115.04
$31.65
|
+492% &
-3%
|
|
Leading Chinese website for search
(similar to Google). 172 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 25, by comparison, right now.)
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.
10 for one stock split on 5.12.10.
|
|
Berkshire Hathaway
|
No
|
BRK.A
|
$97,000
$125,000
(10.15.10)
|
$122,624
|
$125,252
$84,600
|
+26% &
-2%
|
|
See archived ezine Vol. 6, issue
8, for the feature article, "The
Oracle Turns 80."
|
|
Capital One Financial
|
No
|
COF
|
$22.29
$43.35
(7.11.09)
|
$48.24
|
$49.69
$29.98
|
+119% &
+11%
|
|
Read the articles "IPO
of the Year,"
and "American
Express," from
Vol. 7, issue 3 and Vol. 6, issue 2. COF has a lot of liabilities
that are highlighted in the Stock Report Card of the IPO of
the Year article from volume 7, issue 3. If you read the SEC
filings and realize how much COF has off the books, how much
money they’ve had to take from the Feds and much liability
they may have for mortgages that second parties want them
to be responsible for, you’ll know why COF is on the Cooling
Off List. Additionally, S&P rating is BBB with negative
outlook (as of the May 2010 earnings report). Because most
of the debt isn’t due and most of the liabilities aren’t being
reported, earnings could appear to be strong for the full
year, which is why this is not highlighted, even though COF
is trading at a 52-week high.
3Q earnings on Nov. 8, 2010:
net income for the third quarter
of 2010 of $803 million, or $1.76 per diluted common share,
a 32.1 percent increase compared to second quarter 2010 net
income of $608 million, or $1.33 per diluted common share.
Third quarter 2010 net income increased 103.8 percent compared
to third quarter 2009 net income of $394 million, or $0.87
per diluted share.
Total revenue in the third quarter
of 2010 of $4.0 billion increased $112 million, or 2.9 percent,
from $3.9 billion in the second quarter of 2010, reflecting
a modest increase in net interest income and a $100 million
increase in non-interest income.
COF affiliates originated and sold
an aggregate of approximately $121.9 billion original principal
balance of mortgage loans between 2005 and 2008, of which
they believe they may have repayment exposure of $26 billion.
There is ongoing litigation with regard to this.
|
|
eBay
|
No
|
EBAY
|
$29.36
|
$30.31
|
$32.10
$9.91
|
+3%
|
|
eBay is trading at a higher P/E
for a company that is posting flat revenue in a slow retail
environment. Think etail will perform better than retail in
the holiday season, but concerned about investors expecting
too much from these companies in an overbought marketplace
– even if the Feds are pushing people out of treasuries.
|
|
Ford Motor Company
|
Yes
|
F
|
$12.91
$18.65
(1.14.11)
|
$16.27
|
$17.18
$4.71
|
+26% &
-13%
|
|
Read "How
Cap and Trade Saved Ford"
from Vol. 6, issue 4. Ford is making cars people want to drive,
but it owes over $100 billion dollars. Be careful with any
investment here. The same conditions that plagued Chrysler
and GM are present here – lots of debt, pensions and Other
Post Employment Benefit Obligations. Ford built cars that
won awards in 2010 (and attracted consumer interest). And
for that they get a big bravo…
|
|
Google
|
No
|
GOOG
|
$613.69
|
$600.99
|
$629.51
$433.63
|
-2%
|
|
See Vol. 8, issue 2 article, "Big
Bites Out of Apple and Google,"
and Vol. 6, issue 5 for "Hulu
Your Heroes."
Excellent company and great anchor for your large caps in
the nest egg, with one huge hitch – the company has just shaken
up the board room, appointing Larry Page as the CEO (effective
April 1, 2011), moving Dr. Eric Schmidt, whom everyone considers
to be the mastermind from Google the search engine to Google
the ubiquitous Internet and phone behemoth, to executive chairman.
Sergey Brin will handle "strategic projects" without a real
title, except "co-founder." Consensus, colossal insider selling
has ensued since the announcement.
Commenting on these changes, Dr.
Eric Schmidt said: "We've been talking about how best to simplify
our management structure and speed up decision making for
a long time. By clarifying our individual roles we'll create
clearer responsibility and accountability at the top of the
company. In my clear opinion, Larry is ready to lead and I'm
excited about working with both him and Sergey for a long
time to come."
On Nov. 30, 2010, The European
Union opened an inquiry into Google, investigating whether
or not Google violated antitrust laws with their search dominance.
Announced 4Q results on Jan 20,
2011.
Google reported revenues of $8.44
billion for the quarter ended December 31, 2010, an increase
of 26% compared to a year ago. GAAP net income in the fourth
quarter of 2010 was $2.54 billion, compared to $1.97 billion
in the fourth quarter of 2009.
Cash – As of December 31, 2010,
cash, cash equivalents, and marketable securities were $35
billion.
Headcount – On a worldwide basis,
Google employed 24,400 full-time employees as of December
31, 2010.
|
|
Intel
RISK: LOW
|
No
|
INTC
|
$16.66
$20.25 (9.1.09)
|
$21.46
|
$25.29
$12.06
|
+26% &
+5%
|
|
Intel is a great blue chip. But
we are still in a challenging year.
|
|
Kulicke and Soffa Ind.
|
No
|
KLIC
|
$7.68
$9.79
(1.14.11)
|
$9.41
|
$9.58
$4.03
|
+23% &
-4%
|
|
Read "Let
There Be Light"
and "LED
Lighting," from
the December 1, 2010 and August 1, 2010 ezines, Vol. 7, issue
12 and 8. 2010 Company of the Year!
11.10.10 earnings report: 4Q 2010
revenue was $259.3 million – 135% higher than last year. Net
income was $56 million, 872% higher than last year, with a
net profit margin of 21.6%. HOWEVER, the company has a new
CEO & CFO, is moving offices to Singapore and offered
earnings guidance of $125 million – down almost 50% from the
4th quarter. Yikes! As might be expected, there
is consensus, colossal insider selling…
"Looking forward to the December
quarter we forecast revenue to be in the $125 million to $135
million range." Bruno Guilmart, President and Chief Executive
Officer… According to the WSJ, "Guilmart cited plans by customers
to reduce capital spending in the December quarter, pushing
orders out to the March and June quarters." Missing earnings
by such a wide margin could be a big deal when the 1Q 2011
earnings are announced in the first week of February 2011.
Consensus colossal insider selling
on Nov. 4, 2010.
|
|
PIMCO Municipal
Bond Fund
|
No
|
MUNI
|
$50.45
|
$50.22
|
$52.56
$49.68
|
flat
|
|
Read "Bond
Beautification Project"
from Vol. 7, issue 10 and "Bonds,
Bond Funds and T-Bills: The Next Disaster,"
from Vol. 7, issue 9.
|
|
Netflix
|
No
|
NFLX
|
$103.98
$198.92
(12.1.10)
|
$217.98
|
$218.00
$36.25
|
+110% &
+10%
|
|
Read "Blockbuster’s
Second Coming" from
Vol. 7, issue 5.
|
|
Priceline
|
No
|
PCLN
|
$337.82
$437.99 (1.14.11)
|
$425.31
|
$443.19
$154.12
|
+26% &
-3%
|
|
Read the article "The
Priceline Negotiator,"
from Vol. 7, issue 10. Earnings on Nov. 8, 2010 were very
strong, as is forward guidance in terms of revenue. However,
the 4Q guidance on net income is a drop off. Non-GAAP net
income of between $2.91 and $3.06 per diluted share is predicted
for 4Q, whereas the Non-GAAP net income of the 3rd
quarter was $5.33 per diluted share. PE is high, at 48.
|
|
Sears Holding
|
Yes
|
SHLD
|
$52.93
$98.06
(1.11.10)
|
$76.08
|
$125.42
$59.21
|
+43% &
-22%
|
|
Chairman Eddie Lampert has been
dumping shares en masse, to the tune of over $376 million.
Consensus insider selling…
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.
Still don’t have an official CEO.
Bruce Johnson has been the interim CEO and president since
January of 2008, which is not just "weird" it’s a BIG FAT
RED FLAG! The former CFO Miles Reidy decided late in 2008
that he needed to spend more time with his family rather than
to put is name on the 2008 annual report. Another big red
flag. A few C-level executives at Sears are also employed
by Chairman Eddie Lampert for his investment company.
3Q earnings on 11.18.10: Net losses
attributable to Holdings' shareholders for the quarter of
$218 million, or $1.98 per diluted share, in 2010 and $127
million, or $1.09 per diluted share, in 2009. Total revenues
decreased $512 million to $9.7 billion for the quarter ended
October 30, 2010, as compared to total revenues of $10.2 billion
for the quarter ended October 31, 2009. The decline in total
revenue for the quarter was primarily a result of a 4.8% decrease
in domestic comparable store sales and the effect of having
fewer Kmart and Sears Full-line stores in operation, partially
offset by an increase of $54 million due to changes in the
Canadian foreign exchange rate.
W. Bruce Johnson, Sears
Holdings' interim chief executive officer and president
reported in a press release, "Our seasonal apparel sales
were down, with the unusually warm weather being a contributing
factor. Additionally, during the quarter we reduced
our usage of short-term borrowings as we issued $1.25 billion
of 6 5/8% senior secured notes. As such, we had no borrowings
outstanding on the revolver in contrast to last year's balance
of $1.3 billion."
Cash = $1.2 billion at July 31,
2010 (approximately $500 million domestic and $700 million
at Sears Canada), $1.3 billion at August 1, 2009 and $1.7
billion at January 30, 2010. Significant uses of our
cash during the first half of 2010 include $560 million for
the purchase of additional interest in Sears Canada, $273
million for share repurchases, repayments of long-term debt
of $228 million, capital expenditures of $168 million, and
contributions to our pension and post-retirement benefit plans
of $122 million. These uses of cash were funded in part by
an increase in short-term borrowings of $893 million.
Cash balances of $806 million at
October 30, 2010 ($521 million domestic and $285 million at
Sears Canada), compared to balances of $1.5 billion at October
31, 2009 and $1.7 billion at January 30, 2010. Uses
of cash during the first nine months of the year included
$560 million for the purchase of additional interest in Sears
Canada, repayments of long-term debt of $468 million, $317
million for share repurchases, contributions to our pension
and post-retirement benefit plans of $253 million, and cash
used to fund seasonal increases in working capital.
In the "hedge fund" side biz of
Sears, please note that: Sears’ Board of Directors has delegated
authority to direct investment of their surplus cash to Edward
S. Lampert, subject to various limitations that have been
or may be from time to time adopted by the Board of Directors
and/or the Finance Committee of the Board of Directors. Hmm.
|
|
Taubman Centers
REIT
|
No
|
TCO
|
$24.74
|
$51.24
|
$51.88
$21.85
|
+106%
|
|
Read the
article, "Global
Recession," from
Vol. 6, issue 6 in June 2009.
3Q on 10.28.10:
Net income
(loss) allocable to common shareholders per diluted share
(EPS) was $0.01 for the quarter ended September 30, 2010,
up from $(1.77) for the quarter ended September 30, 2009.
"We've now
reported three quarters of double digit tenant sales increases,
and there is strong momentum as we approach the holidays,"
said Robert S. Taubman, chairman, president and CEO. "We
attribute this outstanding performance to the merchandise
mix at our centers and the overall health of our portfolio."
The question
is: If you’ve been to a mall lately, do you believe him?
|
|
Time Warner
|
No
|
TWX
|
$24.44
$31.78
(9.11.10)
|
$31.72
|
$50.70
$17.81
|
+30% &
flat
|
|
Read the article, "Hulu
Your Heroes,"
fromVol. 6, issue 5 in May 2009.
Reports 3Q earnings on 11.3.10.
Revenues rose 2% from the same
period in 2009 to $6.4 billion, reflecting growth at the Networks
segment. Net income was $522 million, down from $662 million
in the 2Q 2010.
Conan O’Brien began hosting a late-night
talk show on TBS on Nov. 8, 2010. Could this take TBS to a
whole new level? Conan killed Leno and Letterman on the debut,
but is since in 3rd, above Jon Stewart, but below
the two late night Kings. Conan attracted far more younger
viewers — the ones advertisers value most. The average age
of Conan's viewer was 30, compared to 56 and 54 respectively
for Jay and Dave. If this "demographic pattern holds, that
could be trouble for the big-network shows going ahead."
Company is buying their own stock…
On January 28, 2010, the Company’s
Board of Directors increased the amount remaining on the Company’s
common stock repurchase program to $3.0 billion for purchases
beginning January 1, 2010.
From January 1 through October
29, 2010, the Company repurchased approximately 54million
shares of common stock for approximately $1.7billion. These
amounts reflect the purchase of 16 million shares of common
stock for approximately $500 million since the amounts reported
in the Company’s second-quarter 2010 earnings release issued
on August 4, 2010.
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Toyota Motor Company
|
No
|
TM
|
$77.05 (2.12.10)
|
$81.36
|
$91.97
$51.79
|
+6%
|
|
Read "Should
You Put the Brakes on Toyota?"
from Vol. 7, issue 2 and "One
Very Hot IPO" from Vol. 7, issue 9.
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Transocean
|
No
|
RIG
|
$56.77
$73.35
(10.15.10)
|
$78.85
|
$94.88
$41.88
|
+39% &
+7%
|
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For more information, read the
article, "Clean
Up," from June
2010 ezine, Vol. 7, issue 6. Transocean lost three out of
the 11 rig workers killed during the BP oil spill.
3Q 2010 results on 11.3.10: Net
income attributable to controlling interest for the three
months ended September 30, 2010 of $368 million, or $1.15
per diluted share, on revenues of $2.309 billion. The results
compare to net income attributable to controlling interest
of $710 million, or $2.19 per diluted share, on revenues of
$2.823 billion, for the three months ended September 30, 2009.
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PowerShares Treasury Bill Index
Fund
|
No
|
PLW
|
$30.02
|
$27.59
|
$30.02
$26.30
|
-8%
|
|
Read "Don’t
Get Fooled Again,"
from Vol. 7, issue 8. When interest rates rise, bonds and
bond funds fall in value. Time to find another "safe" place
for your assets.
|
|
VMWare
|
No
|
VMW
|
$70.58
$91.55
(12.15.10)
|
$85.79
|
$97.30
$25.27
|
+22% &
-6%
|
|
Read
"Health
Care Reform" Vol. 7, issue 4. P/E
is high, even for this great company! Love the company – at
a better price...
|
|
Wells Fargo
|
No
|
WFC
|
$20.05
$29.21
(10.15.09)
|
$31.84
|
$34.25
$23.02
|
+58% &
+9%
|
|
I can’t tell you how many people
I know who haven’t paid their mortgage in six months (or longer)
but are still in their homes. Bank earnings statements right
now are the biggest fairy tales ever told. Additionally, WFC
credit card holders report getting charged 29.9% interest
rates, while class action lawsuits against WFC continue to
mount.
See "Wells
Fargo’s Incredible Exploding Earnings" in
volume 5, issue 9, and "Wells
Fargo’s Great Depression," in Vol. 4, issue 12.
Wells Fargo Chairman takes early
retirement:
Dick Kovacevich stepped down as
chairman and a director at the end of 2009.
|
|
Wynn Resorts
|
No
|
WYNN
|
$95.42
$118.81
(1.14.11)
|
$114.51
|
$176.14
$18.06
|
+20% &
-4%
|
|
Check out the article,
"(No)
Viva Las Vegas"
in Vol. 5, issue 10.
3Q 2010 earnings on 11.2.10. Net
revenues for the third quarter of 2010 were $1.0 billion,
compared to $773.1 million in the third quarter of 2009, driven
by a 49.7% increase in net revenues at Wynn Macau. Net loss
attributable to Wynn Resorts for the third quarter of 2010
was $33.5 million, or ($0.27) per diluted share, compared
to a net income attributable to Wynn Resorts of $34.2 million,
or $0.28 per diluted share in the third quarter of 2009.
Debt: In August 2010, Wynn
Las Vegas issued $1.32 billion of 7 3/4% First Mortgage Notes
due 2020. Our total cash balances at September 30, 2010 were
$1.9 billion. Total debt outstanding at the end of the quarter
was $3.2 billion, including approximately $2.6 billion of
Wynn Las Vegas debt and $552 million of Wynn Macau debt. The
Company, after paying the $8 cash dividend, will have approximately
$1.0 billion in cash and $3.4 billion in debt.
Watch Steve Wynn discuss Washington,
Macau, Vegas, his new Beach Club at Wynn Encore (Las Vegas)
and the future of America on CNBC,
from a May 28, 2010 interview.
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Yahoo
|
No
|
YHOO
|
$15.00
$16.98
(12.15.10)
|
$15.83
|
$19.12
$13.52
|
+5% &
-7%
|
|
Read the "AOL"
article from Vol. 6, issue 12 to review the Stock Report Card
on Yahoo from December 2009.
|
Deleted
in 2008/2009/2010:
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. Deleted AMAT on 8.1.10 with gains of
12.5% & 7% (put gains would be double or more). 8.30.10: Deleted
FIG (-10% & -40%), MXWL (-37%), MDT (-4% & -24%), MSFT (-20%)
-- all for gains. Deleted MGM 9.13.10 for 61% gains. Deleted Tesla
on 1.14.11 with 20% & 24% gains.
Recently
Deleted:
Tesla
(TSLA) on 1.14.11
|
Tesla
|
No
|
TSLA
|
$31.74
$34.33
(12.1.10)
|
$25.75
|
$36.42
$14.98
|
-20% &
-24%
|
|
Read "Tesla
Trades on NASDAQ" from Vol. 7, issue 7.
Should you buy now? Very volatile
stock. Also, production is just now starting on the new lower-priced
sedan. It’s at a former Toyota factory, which places a lot
of ducks in a row, however, ramping up for production is something
that can be wrought with delays and other unexpected kinks.
Combine that with competition for the Leaf and the Volt, and
you have a more vulnerable company. The Leaf is lower-priced
and has a lot less battery power and distance. The Volt is
a hybrid, more like the Prius. However, the Volt just won
the 2011 Car of the Year Award!
|
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
|
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NataliePace.com
Calendar:
Catch
Natalie on CNBC Thursday morning, February 3, 2011, discussing an
industry that is hotter than gold.
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.
To access links
to the event website and registration, go to the Calendar
section at NataliePace.com.
Chinese
New Year
Thursday,
February 3rd, 2011
Chinese
New Year 2011!
Natalie
Pace on CNBC's Squawk on the Street
Thursday,
February 3rd, 2011
7:15AM
through 7:50AM PT
Natalie
Pace will be discussing a segment of the marketplace that is hotter
than gold. Check it out!
Do
As One Breathing Event
Friday, February
4th, 2011
DoAsOne.com
invites you to join "unity" through breath. Join the group
anytime February 4th, 5th or 6th in the Universal Breathing Room
at DoAsOne.com.
Get
Rich and Enrich Retreat, Santa Monica, CA
Saturday, February
5th, 2011
SOLD
OUT. Check the March 2011 retreat for availability. You spend hundreds
of thousands learning how to earn money. Why not spend a fraction
of that learning how to invest? 3 days in a boardroom setting, learning
investing directly from Natalie Pace. Feb. 5-7, 2011.
Dmitri
Hvorostovsky in concert. LA, CA
Thursday, February
10th, 2011
7:30PM through 10:00PM PT
From
the moment he won the Cardiff Singer of the World Competition, Dmitri
Hvorostovsky has been likened by critics to the great voices of
the century.
The
State of Arizona vs. James Arthur Ray Trial Begins
Wednesday,
February 16th, 2011
The
State of Arizona vs. James Arthur Ray Case Number: V1300CR201080049
will begin today. This is around the deaths at a Sweat Lodge that
occurred on Oct. 8, 2009.
Il
Turko in Italia. Rossini. LA, CA
Saturday, February
19th, 2011
7:30PM
through 11:00PM PT
Experience
Rossini's zaniest comedy at L.A. Opera.
Washington's
Birthday
Monday,
February 21st, 2011
Health
Insurance Costs Killing You? Call-in Radio show.
Tuesday,
February 22nd, 2011
5:00PM
through 5:30PM PT.
Health
Savings Accounts reward you for staying healthy. Learn how this
tax-deductible asset can beautify your bottom line. Call-in number:
(347)
215-7305. Log onto: http://www.blogtalkradio.com/nataliepace
GDP
4Q 2010 (2nd Est.)
Friday,
February 25th, 2011
8:30AM
through 8:45AM ET
The
U.S. Dept. of Commerce, Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA.gov) releases
its 2nd estimate on GDP growth in the 4th Q of 2010.
The
Academy Awards
Sunday,
February 27th, 2011
5:00PM
through 8:00PM PT
James
Franco and Anne Hathaway host the 83rd Academy Awards. What's your
favorite film? Which actor/actress inspired you most?
TED2011.
Long Beach, CA
Monday, February
28th, 2011
A
cast of characters capable of stirring the imagination as never
before. Explorers, storytellers, photographers, scientific pioneers,
visionaries and provocateurs from all parts of the globe.
TEDActive
Conference. Palm Springs, CA
Monday, February
28th, 2011
TEDActive
brings innovators of the future together at a desert oasis retreat,
creating startling conversations supplemented by live music, bonus
speakers, and whimsical soirees.
Jonas
Kaufman in concert. LA, CA
Friday, March
11th, 2011
7:30PM through 11:00PM PT
Born
in Munich, tenor Jonas Kaufmann is now internationally recognized
as one of the most important artists of our day.
Get
Rich and Enrich Retreat. Santa Monica, CA
Friday, March
11th, 2011 through Sunday, March 13, 2011
You
spend hundreds of thousands learning how to earn money. Why not
spend a fraction of that learning how to invest? 3 days in a boardroom
setting, learning investing directly from Natalie Pace. March 11-13,
2011. Only 5 seats remain. Call 866-476-7442 NOW!
The
Turn of the Screw. LA, CA
Saturday, March
12th, 2011
7:30PM
through 11:00PM PT
Benjamin
Britten's mesmerizing score brings an unforgettable Henry James
classic to the opera stage.
FOMC
Meeting
Tuesday, March
15th, 2011
The
Federal Open Market Committee meets to determine Federal Reserve
policy in the U.S.
Spring
Equinox
Sunday,
March 20th, 2011
The
official beginning of Spring!

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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
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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).
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and does not operate or act as one.
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