Personal Finance Blog & Investment Resource

Investing like a vulture: buying beat up stocks

February 2nd, 2008 Posted in Investing | 21 Comments »

In 1964, a young investor by the name of Warren Buffet realized something that would eventually make him incredibly wealthy. A fairly large company by the name of American Express was going through a significant scandal that battered its stock price. Investors were losing money and it was considered a deadbeat performer. Warren Buffet, however, was waiting on line at a local store and noticed a couple of people ahead of him using their American Express cards. He asked the cashier, “Have you noticed people using their AMEX cards less”? “Not at all”, he replied. That’s all he needed to hear. He bought a large amount of shares and patiently waited for the stock to recover. It was undervalued, he argued, and the drop in stock price was a gross over reaction to an internal problem that had no effect on profit.  Years later his investment paid off. It was the first example of Warren Buffet buying undervalued, under appreciated stocks.

Fast forward to 2005. Merck, already down from a rough year in 2004, gets hit with a scandal regarding Vioxx. Its stock price went from a high of 64 to a low of 27. It lost over 50% of its stock price at the time. I was paying close attention to it at at the time and I was pointing out to my friends that it was to be strongly considered. They thought I was crazy! With looming lawsuits and a loss of revenue, how can someone make this case? It was simple. The decrease in stock price was not comparable to the more modest decrease in revenues. I bought the stock at $33 in early 2006 and sold it at the end of the year for $42. It was a substantial gain. Looking back, I could have made more. The stock doubled within two years of its low in late 2005.

That brings us to today. Who is getting “beat up” now, and what stock price is dropping more than it should? I’m taking a close look at the major banks who have been writing off huge amounts due to the sub prime mortgage crisis. Many of these banks are still in the black, barely making profits, yet still trending downwards in their stock price. Why? Future expectations and a poor understanding of market forces. I’m paying close attention to these companies and their core businesses and whether or not they are doing well without including the one or two time write offs they are experiencing. My belief is that these companies will have a strong rebound. Citigroup, for instance, has lost over 50% of its stock price in a little over a year. For what? One quarter of record losses which followed 4 or 5 years of record profits. All write offs it experienced and the money it lost in the process was recuperated through foreign capital and the company still holds assets of close to 2 trillion dollars in which to garnish profits from.

So I’m making a prediction here. I’m betting on the belief that the big banks who have been battered lately will begin to go up this summer and will rebound to an equilibrium within two years. I’m not only making a prediction, I’m putting my money where my mouth is. I have transferred a respectable amount ($5,000) to my brokerage account for the purpose of investing in one or two of these stocks. And in two years time, I will link back to this blog to see how my prediction held up.

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Making money through Social lending sites

January 30th, 2008 Posted in Resources | 12 Comments »

I opened an account with Prosper.com in an attempt to start a new passive income campaign. The idea that I could become a “lender” through an established lending site made me ambitious enough to transfer a few hundred dollars to start. However, I happened to have read most of the positive reviews before I transferred some money and more of the critical reviews after the transfer; now I am second-guessing my decision.

Prosper.com description
One of the descriptions used for Prosper is “eBay + PayPal + Match.com”. Lenders find bidders based on credit score, personal story, history, and motives. They bid on interest rates and get paid a premium at the end of the terms (typically three years).

Borrowers
People looking for cash sign up for Prosper and a profile is automatically created. Their personal credit history is for everyone to see: Approximate credit score, debt to income ratio, history of delinquencies, amount of revolving credit, etc. Using this data, Prosper assigns borrowers a letter Grade. AA, A, B, C, D, E, and HR (huge risk). The grade has an impact on the interest rate that is expected to pay.

This is a breakdown of Grade based on Credit Score

AA- 760+
A- 720-759
B- 680-719
C- 640-679
D- 600-639
E- 560-599
HR- 520-559

Lenders
Prosper let’s you purchase a portion of a loan by funding it with a minimum of $50. The idea is that instead of lending a single person $1,000, you can lend 20 people $50. This type of diversification let’s you minimize the risk of non-payment, more common with users on the lower end of the credit ranking.

Take a look at this sample listing for an idea as to what to expect when checking out a listing. “Borrowers” are completely anonymous, referred to using their screen name, and each has a story to tell and a reason for borrowing. In addition to credit data, lenders also see the borrower’s group membership, if any, friendships with other Prosper members, endorsement from those friends, past listings and prior Prosper loans.

Average results

Using the Prosper.com data, annual Return on Investment goes as following:

Lending to AA borrowers: 8.48%
Lending to A borrowers: 6.78%
Lending to B borrowers: 5.85%
Lending to C borrowers: 7.03%

However, I saw this statistic on Wikipedia: As of November 8, 2007, the median estimated return on investment (”ROI”) for Prosper lenders with more than 20 loans and an average loan age greater than 6 months is 4.89%.[13] — after taking into account Prosper’s servicing fee charged to lenders (1% annual fee on A-HR loans).[14]

A return on investment of 5%, on average? That’s comparable to a savings account at ING. Is Prosper.com really worth it, and is money really to be made? I’m not so sure. It’s an illiquid investment. You need to wait 3 years before you get your money back, if the borrower doesn’t default, and that leaves you with your hands tied if the money is needed in the future. It might be worth it if you could guarantee rates of 9-12%, but not 5%. I think a careful study of the borrowers and some investigation of their credit history is important. Mostly importantly, I think their personal stories leave us with a good idea as to how risky they are. Some people are borrowing to fund real estate properties, businesses, and college education. Some are looking to pay off large amounts of credit card debt. Who would YOU trust with your money?

Right now I am contemplating whether or not to transfer my money back into my bank account and focus on something a little more worthy of my greenbacks.

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Mutually Assured Economic Destruction

January 27th, 2008 Posted in Blogs | 4 Comments »

One of the many arguments I hear about a growing deficit is the power other countries begin to wield over America. I’m talking specifically about China and the substantial dollar reserves they are building up from an imbalance of trade. It is estimated that China holds $1.3 trillion dollars of foreign reserves and that at least $800billion of that is made up of U.S. government bonds. The bonds are sold by the U.S. government to make up for their budget deficit and eaten up by fiscally responsible Asian nations who believe in national savings.

This isn’t new. Japan has accumulated over a trillion dollars in reserves over the past half century and has kept the dollar strong in times of weakness by buying up extra reserves. The difference is, Japan is a major ally and friend of the U.S., and it’s in the interest of the Japanese to ensure the dollar is considerably strong because of close links to the American economy.

China’s different. Historical mistrust and our friendship with Asian rivals assures us that the Chinese view the USA as a potential enemy and not a competitor. China is accumulating dollar assets not just to gain wealth but to gain a bargaining chip over the world’s lone superpower. In China it’s called their economic “Nuclear option“. Essentially, the Chinese know that they are increasingly in control of the dollar’s value and that the moves they make can alter the value of it drastically.

How would this work? Let’s pretend that China disagrees with global U.S. policy and decides it wants to act. With military options off the table it decides to wage economic warfare. It starts a massive sale of U.S. bonds. This causes a drastic spike in treasury yields, pounds the housing market, and throws the economy into a guaranteed recession. The USA, which has run a budget deficit for 35 of the last 40 years, would have trouble finding buyers for its U.S. bonds since the dollar’s value is volatile and decreasing. In addition, the price of gold and oil would skyrocket and the rest of the world would become unstable.

Sound far-fetched? Well, its happened before. The United States pulled the same stunt on Britain during the Suez crisis in order to get the British to withdraw from the region in 1956. As written in Wikipedia: “Part of the pressure that the United States used against Britain was financial, as President Eisenhower threatened to sell the United States reserves of the British pound and thereby precipitate a collapse of the British currency. ”

The situation is rather similar today: A world superpower (Britain) is heavily indebted to an emerging superpower (USA) due to war (World war two). Fast forward to 2008: A world superpower (USA) is heavily indebted to an emerging superpower (China) due to war (Iraq & Afghanistan). When another nation controls you physically or economically your sovereignty is threatened, at risk, and exploitable.

This isn’t a doomsday post and I’m not a conspiracy theorist. I am merely concerned as a citizen of this country. Having looked into this a lot, I’ve reached some conclusions about this and I like to think that times are different and the risk isn’t there for a number of reasons. First, China’s wealth is entirely Dependant on the price of the dollar and the overall state of the U.S. economy. A recession (or depression) in the USA threatens the trade imbalance China enjoys with the USA and possibly prevents it from accumulating more wealth through its exports. Second, and more importantly, China’s wealth exists because of the price of the dollar. A massive sell of dollars would take time as there simply isn’t a buyer for $1trillion in greenbacks. That means as China begins to sell off its reserves, the value of the unsold reserves will decrease. A 20% drop in the value of the dollar means that $1trillion China holds is now worth $800billion in purchasing power. It is in China’s best interest to ensure a strong dollar in order to preserve its new-found wealth. Any sudden moves to destabilize the dollar would inadvertently wreck China’s gains over the last 15 years.

Rather than using its “Nuclear option”, I would expect China to do two things going forward. First, it diversifies its reserves into two other currencies: The Euro & the Pound. It then uses its vast pool of reserves to buy up key assets in western nations. The Chinese Sovereign wealth fund, which is actually controlled by the government, will buy up ports, energy assets, and technologically important assets in western nations to continue its long standing tradition of economic espionage. Western nations will continue the upward trend of having foreign-owned businesses. Lastly, economic influence will be more evenly spread out between traditional superpowers and emerging nations like China and Russia.

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Finance tools & gadgets

January 25th, 2008 Posted in Resources | 1 Comment »

Start off the weekend off right by checking out some cool links sent to me the last few days:

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Keys to Creating Passive income

January 24th, 2008 Posted in Blogs, Ideas and tips, Investing, Making money, Resources | 8 Comments »

I like to think of passive income as something you do right once while enjoying its benefits many times over. It only takes one successful attempt to create an income stream that’ll surpass the investment sacrificed. It’s important to consider all of the ideas you read about because they can add up to something much bigger. Shooting for the big ticket item sets you up for disappointment and inevitable failure. To build a sustainable income stream you need to combine many smaller efforts into one large benefit.

Here are a few ideas to get you started

Revver.com
A video sharing website that hosts user-generated content. Revver attaches advertising to user-submitted videos and shares all ad revenue 50/50 with the creators. Uploading a video to Revver has the potential to bring in passive income if it’s watched often. Many videos are passed around through social networks and office e-mails. Some videos reach millions of people around the world. Having a few videos uploaded can bring in some side change. In this case you are uploading the video once and enjoying the benefits many times over.

Dividend income
This is probably the most common form of passive income. It takes an initial investment on your part and you would need a pretty respectable amount of money to make this a big impact to your income. But this article isn’t about finding large streams of income. Even modest investments can net you hundreds of dollars a year in dividends. That’s extra money in your pocket that you didn’t have to work for.

Affiliate income
It requires a bit of know-how on your end, but it’s very possible and quite common for people to get supplemental income through affiliate programs. This requires you to sell products and get commission off of the sales. Starting up a successful website enables you to advertise and sell the goods of another company. Since you are doing work for them they are willing to pay you a percentage of the income. There are many companies out there. One of the bigger companies is Amazon. You can get about 4% on sales simply by redirecting traffic to their site. Many blogs review products and link to them on Amazon, taking a cut of the commission.

Real Estate
A much bigger investment is a rental property. It requires cash up front and maintenance at any given time. The benefit of real estate is that you primarily invest with other people’s money (OPM). In this case you would borrow money from a bank and pay the loan back with income from your tenant(s). When the home price appreciates you make money off your initial investment plus the entire amount provided by the bank. If the property is profitable enough you can get a property manager and truly turn this into passive income.

Conclusion
There is no ‘get rich scheme’ that’s instantly going to make you wealthy. Focus on the small things that add up to the bigger things. Passive income is like a snowball getting bigger in size as you roll it in more snow. Accumulation of income over time will make those small things you do a much bigger benefit. That’s how wealth is developed and sustained.

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