Sunday, 5 October 2008
Thursday, 25 September 2008
So, is it time to buy American equities and assets yet?
My Canadian shares are doing - alright. They've dropped, but not as much as much as my US shares, though Starbucks is still hanging in there.
So, where to invest?
US Financial services? Could be quite risky still. We don't know (nobody knows) the extent of the damage in this industry. The whole sector is "iffy". There is much to be revealed. However, once the news is out, then it is too late.
Gold? The precious metal is used as a hedge in times of uncertainty. There is a seasonal increase in demand due to the wedding season in India. Likely this seasonal variation is understood and, given the amount of gold bullion that is produced, it should not have a big impact on the price. You can "hold" gold in several ways: 1) coins (I recommend Canadian Maple Leaf coins) Did you know that Canada is the #2 producer of gold? 2) bullion - these are gold bars sold by the ounce - not much difference from coins 3) Certificates - I don't know too much about these. This enables you to purchase gold but you do not take delivery of it in bullion. 4) Shares in gold producing companies.
Find some broadly traded shares that have been oversold and are undervalued? Due to margin calls and investors having to sell off their positions to cover other debts, the broadly held companies may have been oversold and are trading below their true market value. ID these, invest and reap the rewards once the markets recover in due time.
Which companies and industries are least affected by this credit crunch?
If we are headed toward a recession - it is indicated - then which sectors and companies will be least affected by a downturn in the economy: which companies are recession-proof?
What countries are attractive for their equities and their currency?
Will the US dollar trend lower? They'll have to print more and more money just to solve the credit problem. They've also go their original (and growing) national debt, trade deficit, budget deficit and a couple of wars to finance. Printing more currency dilutes the currency, thus, lowering it's value and increasing inflation. A weaker dollar makes it more costly to buy foreign goods and cheaper for foreign countries to buy American goods. This can help build the domestic economy. However, with such a strong reliance on foreign oil, gas and energy costs will be higher for American with a weaker dollar.
How about the Japanese economy and the yen?
Or the European Union and the Euro?
I am interested in your thoughts. There is certainly more to follow.
Monday, 15 September 2008
Euros and Gold
Is the US Dollar safe? There are many indicators that say: NO.
=Growing budget deficits
=Growing consumer debt
=Growing balance of trade deficit
=Countries switching to the Euro to settle oil transactions
=The sub-prime mortgage debacle - property prices have yet to stablize
=A meltdown in the investment banking sector and the bail out of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac
=A war in Iraq (and elsewhere) with no end in sight
=The US Federal reserve keeps printing money to pay for it all - this will cause inflation - too many under valued US dollars will dilute the currency
Anything good coming out of the US?
Oh....and the Arctic icecap is melting much faster than expected. Greenland is soon to be green again.
Do you sit tight or get out? Do you buy low - equities and real estate - or do you wait for it to drop lower?
Where there is turmoil and uncertainty there is opportunity.
I am interested in your ideas, insight and perspective.
Sunday, 14 September 2008
Dire Straits - What's going on in America?!
First it was Bear, Stearns.
Recently it was Fannie Mae & Freddie Mac.
Now Lehman Brothers and Merrill Lynch as in trouble.
BBC News: Lehman set to go into insolvency
There is major cause for concern. These are major, well establish American financial institutions who are facing dire straits - including bankruptcy. The US media is downplaying the severity.
This is not on par with the savings and loan fiasco that plagued regions of the US back in the 1980s and 1990s. This is national and it is big. The full impact is yet to be felt but, in my opinion, it will be a significant impact to the US financial sector, the US economy and the US dollar as a world currency.
Sunday, 7 September 2008
The impact of the bail out
Are you going to rush in to borrow in a housing market in a major slump? This is great if you are preparing to re-finance your mortgage. If you are investing in real estate or considering buying, when is a good time? Will prices continue to decline? I am not expert. However, I observe that real estate, like all markets, move in cycles. Real estate in many North American markets is presently in a downward cycle. If you are buying a home to live in for a long time (7-10 years), it's always a good time. If you are awaiting a better price - wait a while. If you are look for a "fire sale" - they appear to be on now in many US markets. More will come as the North American economy - also in a cycle - slumps downward.
What rescue means for mortgage rates
Bailout of mortgage giants should result in lower mortgage costs and make credit more available. But lending standards will stay tight and risky borrowers will still pay extra fees.
Friday, 29 August 2008
A Great time to review personal spending patterns
Statistics Canada says gas and food prices are eating up a larger portion of our spending money, while CIBC reports household debt in Canada is rising faster than personal disposable income.
Read the Article
Wednesday, 20 February 2008
How to turn $1000 into $1 million
" Retire comfortably: $1 million in 45 years
...let's not get greedy, and let's not extrapolate for decades out into the future what has been a start beyond even the most optimistic expectations. What if we dial back our expectations and assume a still very aggressive annualized 16.6% return on our initial investment? In that case, $1,000 would take 54 months to double. And under that scenario, it would take approximately 540 months for $1,000 to double 10 times to reach $1 million -- or 45 years."
Read the whole article on Motley Fool.
Returns of 16.6% per annum are highly difficult, if not impossible, to achieve year after year. The lesson here is what it takes to make $1 million is highly unreasonable and you should not expect it. Invest regularly. Get rich slowly.
Thursday, 7 February 2008
The Economic State of the Union
The Economic State Of The Union -- 2008
BY CHARLES McMILLION
Here are the first few paragraphs. I encourage you to read the rest...
In just the past seven years, U.S. household debt almost doubled and federal debt soared by near two-thirds, rocketing by a combined $10.5 trillion. The total combined debt of households ($14.4 trillion) and the federal government ($9.2 trillion) is now 168 percent of GDP, far higher even than in the brief spike during World War II. All other levels and ratios of debt also have soared far beyond any past precedent.
Yet, this record-shattering explosion of debt stimulus created the weakest seven-year job growth (4.4 percent) and one of the weakest periods of real GDP growth (18.1 percent) since the Depression: less than 6 million new jobs ($1.8 million of debt per job) and a mere $4 trillion increase in GDP.
This period began with the collapse of Wall Street's stock market bubble from the late 1990s and ends now with the collapse of Wall Street's housing and other debt bubbles. That such massive mortgage and consumer borrowing, tax cuts and war spending produced such remarkably weak real economic results suggests the months and years ahead could be quite difficult.
Yet, along with the Fed rate cuts for cheaper debt, the only policies seriously considered by this year's crop of Wall Street-funded political candidates is more short-term household and federal debt "stimulus." Locked into a failed, 30-year-old ideology of deregulation and debt, there is still no option to compete with the remarkably effective industrial and trade policies pursued by China and others.
Buffett: Bank woes are "poetic justice"
Buffett warned years ago about the coming decline of the US dollar and about suspect banking - lending practices. I could see it coming as well. No one listened to me either!
Read the story on Reuters:
http://www.reuters.com/articlePrint?articleId=USN0631767220080207
Wednesday, 30 January 2008
Credit Report? Get your FICO Score
What is a Credit Score?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Credit_score
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/FICO_score
http://www.myfico.com/CreditEducation/CreditScores.aspx
90% of the largest U.S. banks use FICO® scores*
http://www.myfico.com/
Monday, 28 January 2008
Unsustainable Growth: US New Homes Plunge

When anything rises quickly and without a strong supporting foundation, it falls quickly. We see it in new housing sales and we see it stock markets when share prices surge.
This plunge will have ripple effects in all supporting industries in the housing sector. They all benefited from the dramatic growth - make hay while the sunshines - and now they are all facing the other side of the chart. Take note of the moderate growth in earlier years. Moderate. Stable. So, what caused the dramatic growth? Low interest rates? Perhaps. Though rates had been relatively low since 1999. Perhaps it was the growth and pervasiveness of sub-prime loans driving this situation. Now the plug has been pulled and the results are showing up.
Read the story.
Interest rate and the US Dollar
Why change the interest rate?
In recent years central banks have used the interest rate to tweak things in economies. when economies are expanding too quickly - this can cause inflation - increasing the interest rate, and thus the cost of borrowing, can moderate this growth. Conversely, when economic activity is slowing, lowering the interest rate can act as a stimulus for the economy so that businesses and individuals can borrow money to expand business or buy a home or car. We have seen the latter recently in the US as the Federal Reserve lowered the borrowing rate by a significant 3/4% in an effort to stimulate the US economy.
Thursday, 24 January 2008
Times are not so bad, actually.
The Economist does a nice job of bringing insight and clarity to the global economic situation.
"In this article we look at three pieces of evidence: the underlying social conditions in poor countries; poverty alleviation over the past decade; and the incidence of wars and political violence. By those measures the world seems to be in rather better shape than most people realise."
Read the in-depth article:Somewhere over the rainbow
Wednesday, 23 January 2008
How you may be affected by the Fed's rate-cut
What is the impact on the US economy and what is the impact on your personal finances?
How you may be affected by the Fed's rate-cut
Give a man a fish and feed him for a day...
Will the proposed "stimulus package" proposed by President Bush aid the economy? In a word: No. The proposed one-shot payment will do little.
Monday, 21 January 2008
Refinance - Should you refinance your mortgage?
A good question. Is it worth refinancing your home mortgage to a shorter term at a lower rate?
There are refinance charges to consider. You may be better to change how you pay your mortgage:
a) switch to weekly payments
b) make extra or annual / semi-annual lump sum payments
both a and b will help to retire you mortgage sooner and at lower overall interest payments from you.
Check an answer to this question here.
Big drop in the Dow? Don't panic
The Dow Jones Industrial Index is a collection of 30 stocks. 30 Stocks. That being said, it is an indicator, and a psychological barometer.
Wait for the bounce.
When ever markets drop quickly they bounce back. Like a ball. We have seen it on many occasions. Let's see how the markets perform in the weeks ahead.
Sunday, 20 January 2008
Ok, so there’s a recession. So what?
More than three out of four Americans believe that a recession has already started or will hit in '08. Half have cut their spending, which could make a slowdown worse.
All economies move in cycles. Plan for it. Expect it. The smart money does. You can too. I’ve always been a bit of a contrarian. When times are good I’m always a little worried because I know they don’t last. Make hay while the sun shines.
When economies recede not all sectors are affected. Some sectors continue to grow.
The term “recession” is widely miss-used. In fact, the true definition is two consecutive quarters of declining GDP. Some times they refer to a decline as “negative growth”. Funny. Anyway, that’s the official definition that economist use to define one. The force that has the greatest impact on economic growth is the public’s perception. If people think times are bad, then times are bad. If there is perception that times are going to get worse then people will hold off on major purchases like cars, homes, home renovations and major appliances.
OK, so despite this, life goes on. People eat, kids go to school, you drive a car, gotta buy new socks and underwear. It may mean that you don’t buy a new car. You choose to go camping instead of visiting Disney World.
The money that we spend on everything beyond the necessities is called discretionary income. You spend it at your discretion beyond food, housing and clothing basics. So things like renting a DVD at Blockbuster, buying a latte at Starbucks or flying on Southwest Airlines to play golf in
If you are an investor you may want to consider invested that are resistant to recessions – sometimes called “recession proof”. These are the companies that tend to chug along through good times and bad. They are not the sexy stocks one looks for when times are good but they ought to make up a portion of your investment portfolio.
Want some ideas for recession-proof or recession-resistant investments? Here are few:
You gotta eat – my feeling, and this is just my feeling, is that we are going to see a strain on the prices of many foods. This is due to an increase in incomes in
Drink – beverages, alcohol, water. If it’s alcohol, it’s Diageo– makers of Guinness, Smirnoff, Bailey’s, Cuervo and a wide variety of others. Demand continues through out the developing world as incomes improves, and, hey, aren’t we likely to want to drown our sorrows during bad times?
Go to school – how do you make money from going to school?! There’s a great company, a Canadian company, called Laidlaw who are quite recession proof. They are in two business areas: garbage collection and school bus operations. In good times or bad times you are going to make garbage and your kids are going to go to school. Unfortunately, Laidlaw is now privately owned. Somebody thought it was a good investment.
Go to the doctors – Health related stocks are often worth a look. Shares in drug companies are risky. New drugs need FDA approval, patents expire and generic drugs take the place of name-brand drugs, lawsuits emerge. Tread lightly here. Rather, look for more stable health-related companies like medical supplies and equipment makers.
Use energy – electricity, oil and gas. High oil prices are great if you own shares in oil companies. I do. I hope oil goes to $200 a barrel. Invest and be happy like a Saudi sheik. Natural gas is often a by product of oil extraction. Gas can not be transported like oil and presently there is too much of it. Electricity has a regular, ongoing demand.
Throw away – Garbage collection – There is always garbage. These companies exhibit stable income streams – good times and bad. I know of one Canadian company called BFI CANADA INCOME TRUST. This trades on the Toronto Stock Exchange as an income trust and not as a regular equity. Income trusts pay out to unit holders monthly from their cash flow. This is considered income to you, the investor. Read up before you invest. See:
Insurance – I am not going to pick any here. There are lots around. It worked well for Warren Buffet.
This posting and all content published herein is not a recommendation for investment and ought not be considered as such.
Thursday, 17 January 2008
U.S. Consumer Debt Rose $15.4 Billion in November
A January 8th article in Bloomberg by Vincent Del Giudice reports:
U.S. consumer borrowing rose more than forecast in November as Americans used credit cards and auto loans to add to a record amount of debt, Federal Reserve statistics showed.
Consumer credit increased $15.4 billion for the month to $2.51 trillion, the Fed said today in Washington. In October, credit rose $2 billion, less than the previously reported gain of $4.7 billion. The Fed's report doesn't cover borrowing secured by real estate, such as home-equity loans.
The figures suggest Americans are relying more on credit cards and other short-term borrowing to maintain spending after the collapse in subprime lending made bank loans harder to get. An increase of 133,000 U.S. jobs in November and December was the lowest for those two months since 2002 and disposable incomes aren't keeping pace with inflation.
``With job losses mounting, this could be the tip of the iceberg with consumers needing to rely more on credit cards now that personal income is lagging,''said Chris Rupkey, an economist at Bank of Tokyo-Mitsubishi, in New York.Read the story.
By the way, $2.51 trillion looks like this: $2,510,000,000,000
Wednesday, 16 January 2008
Emerging Markets: A changing role
In fact the credit crisis is not global. The emerging markets are not exposed to the same credit problems. Once seen as borrowers of capital, dependent upon the US and developing economies, emerging economies are now holders of capital.
The developed economies may now be reliant upon these countries - China, India, Brazil, and several of the Middle Eastern economies.
See: Emerging markets withstanding credit crisis, reports EFIC's World Risk Developments bulletin
As well: China, India to drive growth as credit crisis gains momentum
As large as the US economy is, it is not the only economy and it has not been a growing one. The harping by the US media that a recession in the US will cause a global recession are totally unfounded and irresponsible. The EU is a strong, sound and stable economy. India and China will continue to grow internally. An economy does not need to rely heavily upon trade to grow. Besides, the US is not China's only market. And, when an economy recedes it doesn't mean nothing gets bought, built, or consumed. It just means that it may be less than it was. In some sectors.
The tables may have turned.
Perhaps now the emerging economies have emerged.
Thursday, 10 January 2008
Changes to Canada's Bankruptcy Act
Bill C-12 Update
On December 14, 2007, Bill C-12, An Act to amend the Bankruptcy and Insolvency Act, the Companies’ Creditors Arrangement Act, the Wage Earner Protection Program Act and chapter 47 of the Statutes of Canada, 2005 received Royal Assent. No amendments were made by the Senate such that the bill became chapter 36 of the Statutes of Canada, 2007. Contrary to what you may have heard or read, none of the amendments are in force yet. A coming into force date will be fixed by order of the Governor in Council, which has not yet been tabled.
Read more
Wednesday, 9 January 2008
Home foreclosures increase 94%
"Home foreclosure filings in October edged up 2 percent from September but at 224,451 were a whopping 94 percent higher than a year earlier, real estate data firm RealtyTrac said on Thursday.The figure, a sum of default notices, auction sale notices and bank repossessions, was down from a 32-month peak in August however, RealtyTrac, an online market of foreclosure of properties, said in its monthly foreclosure market report.
RealtyTrac said the national foreclosure rate was one filing for every 555 U.S. households in October."
Nevada, previously the hottest real estate market, now leads the nation in foreclosures. California ranks 2nd in foreclosures according to the report.
Florida, Ohio, Georgia, Michigan, Colorado, Arizona, Indiana and Illinois round out the top 10.
Read the whole story on Reuters.
Friday, 4 January 2008
Bankruptcy and Insolvency Resources
CANADA
Bankruptcy Basics - from the Government of Canada
USA
Bankruptcy Basics - from the United States Government
UK
The Insolvency Service - from the UK Government