Archive for the 'Money Makers' Category

Investing Basics - Stocks, Mutual Funds, Real Estate & Online Investing

Have you ever thought of investing? Do you have a family that you would like take care of? Does the idea of making money with stocks, bonds, mutual funds and real estate interest you?

Investing is essential to making money. Whether it be stock investing, investing online, real estate investing, finance investing, investing in bonds, investing in mutual funds. All are essential in helping secure your finances, and financial stability for you and your family. If you are interested in investing, continue reading about ways to make money. We will briefly discuss the concepts of investing with stocks and mutual funds, investing with real estate and investing online.

Stock & Mutual Fund Investing

The stock market is a great place to make money. If you intend on investing with stocks and mutual funds, we highly suggest that you first do research on the companies you wish to invest in. Although the stock market is a great place to make money, there is also a degree of risk involved.

Real Estate Investing

Investing in real estate is safer than the stock market. A lot of people purchase homes that need are in need of remodeling, and can make a lot of money by fixing them up and selling them. Be advised that it isn’t as simple as buying a house, painting it, and then selling it. There are a lot of factors that you should consider before you attempt to invest in real estate.

Online Investing

Another fast growing way to invest is through trading online. Traders have the capability of doing research, buying and selling and making money with their investments all with the simplicity of sitting in front of a computer. It’s amazing at how easily you can work your finances online, and make money without even leaving the house!

If you plan on investing, make sure you educate yourself in the market or means in which you wish to proceed. Whether it be investing with stocks, investing with mutual funds, investing with real estate or investing online, do your research and make some money! If you are looking for a resource to help you with investing, you can visit our website and you will find ample information about investments, and how to make money.

Brian M. Gardner is the Founder of Financial-Articles.com - An Online Money Making Resource. Learn how to make money and acquire wealth by investing in stocks and mutual funds, as well as how to be successful in sales, marketing and advertising.

Visit Brian’s website at http://www.financial-articles.com

written by adminPermalinkComments OffLeave a Comment »

Time / Diagonal Spreads - Effects of Volatility on the Time Spread

When purchasing a time spread, the investor should pay attention
not only to the movement of the stock price but especially to
the movement of volatility.

Volatility plays a very large roll in the price of a time spread
and, as we have stated, the time spread is an excellent way to
take advantage of anticipated volatility movements in a hedged
fashion.

Since the time spread is composed of two options, the investor
should understand the role of volatility in options as well as
in time spreads. Let’s start with option volatility.

An option’s volatility component is measured by a term called
vega. Vega, one of the components of the pricing model, measures
how much an option’s price will change with a one point (or
tick) change in implied volatility. Based on present data, the
pricing model assigns the vega for each option at different
strikes, different months and different prices of the stock.

Vega is always given in dollars per one tick volatility change.
If an option is worth $1.00 at a 35 implied volatility and it
has a .05 vega, then the option will be worth $1.05 if implied
volatility were to increase to 36 (up one tick) and $.95 if the
implied volatility were to decrease to 34 (down one tick).
Remember, vega is given in dollars per one tick volatility
change.

As we continue to discuss vega, keep these facts in mind

1. Vega measures how much an option price will change as
volatility changes.

2. Vega increases as you look at future months and decreases as
you approach expiration.

3. Vega is highest in the at the money options.

4. Vega is a strike-based number - it applies whether the strike
is a call or a put.

5. Vega increases as volatility increases and decreases as
volatility decreases.

It is important to note that an option’s volatility sensitivity
increases with more time to expiration. That is, further
out-month options have higher vegas than the vegas of the near
term options. The further out you go over time, the higher the
vegas become.

Although increasing, they do not progress in a linear manner.
When you check the same strike price out over future months you
will notice that vega values increase as you move out over
future months.

The at-the-money strike in any month will have the highest vega.
As you move away from the at-the-money strike, in either
direction, the vega values decrease and continue to decrease the
further away you get from the at-the-money strike.

Remember, vega (an option’s volatility component value) is
highest in at-the-money, out-month options. Vega decreases the
closer you get to expiration and the further away you move from
the at-the-money strike. The chart below shows vega values for
QCOM options.

As you look at the chart observe the important elements: the
stock price is constant at 68.5; volatility is constant at 40;
time progresses from June to January; and finally, the strike
price changes from 50 through 80. Notice the increasing pattern
as you go out over time. Also notice how the value decreases as
you move away from the at-the-money strike.

Another important fact about vega is that it is a strike-based
number. That means that the vega number does not differentiate
between put and call. Vega tells the volatility sensitivity of
the strike regardless of whether you are looking at puts or
calls. So, the vega number of a call and its corresponding put
are identical.

_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/
Amazing Options Trading Strategies For Safer Investing
and Explosive Profits. Discover how to protect your
investments with the leveraged power of options. Step
by step video tutorials show you how. Click here now:
http://www.options-university.com
_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/

written by adminPermalinkComments OffLeave a Comment »

Mr. Market

I constantly hear the talking heads on CNBC-TV, the radio and other places talking about THE market. Of course, they mean the stock market which actually now is world wide and no longer just concentrated in New York. To every New Yorker New York is the center of the world from which radiates all knowledge and everything else worthwhile.

The stock market is thousands of companies world wide. Those that have been listed with the New York Stock Exchange must meet strict requirements as to the capitalization of the company and the price of their stock as well as its ability to be traded so there must be many thousands of shares and large numbers of shareholders.

The trick, and I call it that even though it isn’t, is to be able to tell when it is in an up trend and when it is going down. If you knew this you could not only make a lot of money but could keep from giving back profits when you have them. When the market is going up you want to own stocks and mutual funds because 60% of a move in stocks is due to the general direction of the overall market.

When I first invested I made and lost like everyone else until I learned to listen to the voice of Mr. Market. Because we are so overwhelmed with useless data from brokers, newspapers, magazines, TV, friends and other nefarious sources we haven’t taken the time to learn the language of the market. And it isn’t that complicated. Mr. Market will tell you all you need to know.

Most of us don’t have time to be pouring over the financial news every day because we have a life that requires our attention, but if you are willing to give about 15 minutes each week you can learn the language of Mr. Market. Day trading language is not where it’s at; however, the long term language is very easy. You simply plot a 200-day moving average of the S&P500 Index and when the index price is above the 200-DMA you buy and when it is below you sell and put your money in a money market fund.

Now I know that seems too simple, but it isn’t. You can easily check it out with a historical study on many Internet web sites. I use www.bigcharts.com by clicking on the red Interactive box and then following the instructions in the left hand column. With this simple method you will always be on the right side of the market.

The mutual funds in this simple plan only need to be checked once each week and sometimes only monthly. If you have a 401K you should be able to transfer to a money market fund when a sell signal is given with no commission charges. It will be a rare occasion if you do this twice a year.

This not a get-rich-quick scheme. It will allow you to keep most of the profits you have made during a bull market and protect your funds during a bear phase.

Al Thomas - EzineArticles Expert Author

Al Thomas

Author of “If It Doesn’t Go Up, Don’t Buy It!”

Never lose money in the stock market again.

http://www.mutualfundmagic.com

written by adminPermalinkComments OffLeave a Comment »

Cash For Annuity - The Answer You’ve Been Looking For?

You’re the recipient of a structured settlement annuity but desire cash for annuity instead of your regular annuity payments.

But is cash for annuity really to your advantage? Sometimes yes and sometimes no, it all depends on your individual situation.

It’s true there are advantages and disadvantages for both the annuity seller and the annuity buyer.

The seller may require expensive medical care that is ongoing. In such a case, a structured settlement annuity would ensure that there is money to cover medical expenses over the long haul. Cash for annuity on the other hand, could vanish quickly leaving you with nothing or next to nothing to cover your medical expenses. Or, if you were to invest your cash for annuity wisely you could produce an even greater windfall.

From the perspective of an annuity buyer a minimal investment upfront would produce a substantial long term yield.

On the outside a cash for annuity payment may appear to be a win-win situation for both parties. And in some cases it is.

However, as an annuity seller you need to understand that once you receive cash for annuity you no longer have any right to your original settlement amount. It is no longer yours to claim and all you receive is the lump sum amount you agreed upon with your buyer.

Because of this, it’s crucial you do your homework prior to seeking cash for annuity. Seek the advice of a qualified professional who will give you an unbiased opinion.

If your structured settlement is new, now may not be the right time to seek cash for annuity. Your odds for receiving a healthy windfall are slim to none. No buyer worth his or her salt would agree to wait upwards of 20 years to see their investment pay off.

Do yourself and your family a favor and seriously look at your reasons for wanting to seek cash for annuity. Do you have an immediate financial need or are you just impatient and have dollar signs dancing in your head?

Huge cash for annuity mistakes can be made on impulse when you see large dollar signs and/or financial stress is getting the best of you.

If however you feel you could yield greater profits by having cash for annuity upfront then selling may be in your best interest.

Last but not least, give some thought to the amount of money you will be forfeiting when you accept cash for annuity.

When you’re looking for cash for annuity you need to decide on your bottom line. What price will you accept?

Seek the guidance of a professional and once you have answers to all your cash for annuity questions and if you feel it’s in your best interest to sell your annuity then go for it. In some cases, the cash for annuity arrangement may be worth a lot more to you any future payments you’ll be giving up.

To learn more about structured settlement annuities visit http://www.annuityadvice.blogspot.com

Ellie Gibb is a freelance writer who writes extensively on personal finance matters. For more advice on annuity funding options visit http://www.annuityadvice.blogspot.com Other money management help is available at http://www.personalfinance-moneymatters.blogspot.com - Copyright.

written by adminPermalinkComments OffLeave a Comment »

The Importance of Maintenance Cap-Ex

Maintenance Cap-Ex

The nice thing about having low capital spending, is the pleasant surprise it creates. You find a company that is earning more (economically) than other companies with the same GAAP numbers. So, the P/E ratio tends to exaggerate how expensive the business is.

This is kind of like finding a business with excess cash. While it’s true that a business can have too much cash from an efficiency point of view, finding more cash on the balance sheet than you expected is always a good thing, right? The point in each case is that the headline numbers (EPS, P/E, etc.) sometimes lie - and an inordinate number of bargains are found where such “lies” exist - simply, because others aren’t looking there (it’s a less conspicuous bargain).

“Wouldn’t it mean the company wasn’t reinvesting in P&E?”

Some businesses have a very strong relationship between the value of the assets in the business and earnings.

Others have almost no correlation between the two. For an example of a business that will likely have very different ROAs from year to year (and longer-term) look at Forward Industries (FORD). A less extreme example is Craftmade International (CRFT), further down the spectrum (but still very asset light) you have companies like Timberland (TBL) and K-Swiss (KSWS).

For an example of a business, that long-term at least, has to add to assets to add to earnings look at Village Supermarket (VLGEA). In this case (as in the case of most retailers), the long-term correlation between assets and earnings is somewhat obscured by operating leverage; however, logically at least, you do recognize that a supermarket’s earnings will be determined in large part by the number (and size) of the stores being operated.

Also on this side of the spectrum (businesses with a strong long-term correlation between assets and earnings) you have various businesses that own distinct, identifiable assets such as: theme parks, pipelines, parking lots, bowling alleys, golf courses, hotels, etc. Of course, you also have asset-heavy manufacturing businesses, especially in price sensitive, commodity-like products.

Both of these types of businesses tend to have more predictable returns on assets (at least on the margins). I add the qualifier, because it’s a rare business that is both capital intensive and highly profitable - although I’m sure you could name a handful of such conglomerates.

Some asset-light businesses have predictable returns on assets - not so much because there is a strong correlation between assets and earnings, but rather because there is the absence of disruptive change and some real protection from price competition. An example would be McCormick (MKC) - a business that has a fairly predictable ROA largely because it’s simply a great business (albeit a slow growth business).

One of the greatest investing conundrums is the fact that it is usually easiest to reinvest retained earnings at past rates of return in a poor business and hardest to reinvest retained earnings at past rates of return in a good business.

In other words, many of the least limited businesses tend to be the least profitable, and many of the most profitable tend to be the most limited. That’s why you hear me talk so much about “franchises” and “niches”.

I may not have played this point up as much as I should have. But, if I were forced to invest every dime I had in a single business and hold it for the rest of my life, the first characteristic I would look for is a business with virtually no need for maintenance cap-ex.

The Pleasant Surprise
The pleasant surprise is finding that the GAAP earnings are lower than the actual amount of cash a 100% owner would be able to extract from the business, if he chose not to expand it (via additional spending).

A lot of companies have depreciation charges that adequately mirror maintenance cap-ex requirements. That isn’t to say the two items are necessarily the same amount; but, the extent to which they diverge from each other is not terribly specific to the business. The most obvious reason for a major divergence is inflation. Regardless, stocks with similar P/E ratios generally also have similar “owners’ earnings” multiples.

This isn’t true if the assets on the book don’t really need to be replaced to maintain the same earnings power. Some businesses do have assets that need to be maintained (brand, technology, etc.) - but, these assets are maintained as a part of daily operations and are not broken out as a separate item (it would be nearly impossible to separate “brand maintenance” from other expenses anyway).

The most conspicuous examples of such brand maintenance are all the ads you see for GEICO, 1-800-PetMeds, etc. At least in these two cases, there is no doubt such advertising creates an economic asset that helps generate earnings in future periods.

Such spending is not treated as a capital investment. Therefore, GAAP accounting tends to exaggerate the actual cost of day-to-day operations for these businesses and understate the amount of additional investment in the business (both GEICO and 1-800-PetMeds are heavily investing in future growth - it’s just that those investments aren’t in the form of tangible assets such as a new plant).

I’m sure it sounds like I’m taking quite a leap here. After all, there have been businesses that argued for the amortization of certain operating expenses that clearly did not have much of a useful life. You may remember a few such instances from the late 90s. However, a review of the past financials for PetMeds Express (PETS) illustrates my point. Since 2000, the company’s revenues have increased roughly tenfold while net Property, Plant, and Equipment has been cut by two-thirds.

The reason? Advertising. The majority of the company’s operating expenses are advertising expenses. Let me put the difference between the intangible asset of the 1-800-PetMeds brand and all of the company’s tangible assets into perspective. In 2005, depreciation expenses totaled less than 0.5% of sales while advertising expenses totaled more than 15% of sales. In previous years, advertising expenses were even greater as a percentage of sales.

My point is simply that some of this advertising spending (and I’m guessing a whole lot) creates economic benefits in future periods. In other words, economically, part of that advertising spending is an investment, not an expense. I’m not saying GAAP accounting should treat the advertising as an investment in an intangible asset, I’m just saying, the advertising is such an investment.

So, the pleasant surprise is the phantom investment. GAAP earnings in previous years were lower than economic earnings, because an investment in future growth was treated as an operating expense.

Again, I think this is, in fact, how the item should be treated by accountants. However, investors need to recognize the distinction and adjust their expectations accordingly.
To better explain what all this talk of accounting for advertising is about, I’ll provide an excerpt from the company’s 10-K:

The Company’s advertising expense consists primarily of television advertising, internet marketing, and direct mail/print advertising. Television costs are expensed as the advertisements are televised. Internet costs are expensed in the month incurred and direct mail/print advertising costs are expensed when the related catalog and postcards are produced, distributed or superseded.

Simply put, the hit to earnings is immediate, while the full economic benefits are only realized over a period of many years.

That’s what I meant when I said the EPS number (and thus the P/E ratio) “sometimes lie”. This is one of those times. An owner would see the advertising spending differently than the GAAP portrayal. Therefore, he would believe the true P/E ratio was lower than it appeared to be.

The Value of Intangibles

Intangible assets are often harder to reproduce than tangible assets.

There is a nearly infinite potential supply of new plants and stores if a competitor wants to build them - and they can usually be built at the same cost regardless of who builds them.

Already, if a competitor wanted to reproduce the 1-800-PetMeds or GEICO brands, they would have to spend considerably more than those companies did, because both brands are fairly entrenched within our minds - they’ve staked a claim to the territory in our mind where we think “pet meds” or “auto insurance”.

You can’t reproduce those brands at the same cost. Furthermore, in both of these cases, you’d have to lose money or accept a much narrower margin while you did build the brand up. So, while the barriers to entry may not be obvious, the barriers to profitability and dominance are quite clear.

Both companies already own a little piece of your mind. That’s valuable real estate - even if it doesn’t show up on the books.

Hidden Bargains

How does one parse the numbers to find these hidden bargains?

There is no purely quantitative way of doing this. Qualitative considerations loom large in any estimate of cap-ex requirements, because the nature of the business and the competitive position of the firm are key determinants of how effective new cap-ex spending is.

If you can’t explain why one company spends less on cap-ex than its competitors, you have to assume the current skimping on cap-ex is not sustainable.

One important caveat though: many companies in the same industry are not competitors, and therefore cap-ex comparisons between them are of little use. For example, Strattec (STRT) and Lear (LEA) both make auto parts. However, they aren’t competitors. Lear makes interiors; Strattec makes locks.

The lock business is not the same as the interior business. The industries aren’t equally profitable and they aren’t equally competitive. You have to analyze each business separately - just as you can’t lump Amazon.com (AMZN) and 1-800-PetMeds together, even though they both sell a lot of stuff on the web.

Any consideration of cap-ex spending and how it’s really divided between “maintenance” and “investment” has to begin with your assessment of the nature of the industry in general and the specific competitive position of the company you’re looking at.

Then, you can start making cap-ex comparisons. But, don’t allow yourself to become unduly wed to the numbers. Bring your understanding of what’s needed to maintain and expand the particular business and what competitors are likely to do (and the unintended consequences those likely actions will produce).

Some industries are easy. Unless you have a very special case, a steel company’s cap-ex will be determined by the long-term economics of the steel industry (which is not extraordinarily profitable). You aren’t going to find one company that can skimp on capital spending - they all have to ante up each round.

At any one time, the numbers for the last few years may not make this fact obvious, but you’ll know it, because of the qualitative judgments you bring to your analysis of any particular steel company. Just as your qualitative judgments about 1-800-PetMeds would have helped you realize the low cap-ex spending there was perfectly fine, because the real investment was the advertising. These are the things the numbers alone can’t tell you.

Geoff Gannon writes a daily value investing blog and produces a twice weekly (half hour) value investing podcast at:

http://www.gannononinvesting.com

written by adminPermalinkComments OffLeave a Comment »