All Posts Tagged With: "investments"
Minimize your Investing Costs
Jennifer McClelland | RSS | Tue, Nov 17 2009 | 0 Comments
You can minimize how much you spend when it comes to investing by doing just a few things. Cutting how much someone spends on investing is one of the five painless ways to cut expenses in a report from Time Magazine.
One thing that you can do to minimize your investing costs is, of course, to go from a full service brokerage to one that offers cheaper trades. Then again, a lot of people aren’t comfortable with making decisions when it comes to their investments. There are some brokerages that will charge very little per trade, but they are going to let you make your decisions. The stock information that you are missing out on by picking out one of these brokers could be made up by searching the internet for investment information. You have to be a bit more hands on with your trades but you could save yourself a lot of money in the long run.
Another thing that eats at your money when it comes to investing is that you are being charged fees that are hidden in your 401 (k) or your IRA. When you have your money in these kinds of funds they are often put in mutual funds and there are recurring fees associated with them. Because these fees are deducted from the balance already in the account rather than charging you out of your bank account, they often fly under the radar.
The best way to help out your 401(k) and the fees associated with it is to stick with low-cost index funds. You can reduce your annual expense to as little as 0.2% of the balance. There are actively managed funds that can cost you up to 1.20% of your balance.
From the article:
On an account worth $100,000, your annual cost in index funds is a mere $200 instead of $1,190 with actively managed funds. So you’d save $990 a year by switching. But that’s only the start.
The money you save each year stays in the fund and grows. Let’s say a low-cost index fund and an average-cost actively managed fund both grow 8% a year for 20 years. Over that period, you’d end up with $75,678 more with the index fund by virtue of the additional compound returns from lower expenses; the index fund would grow to $449,133 while the actively managed fund would grow to $373,455. That’s more than $3,700 a year.
Related posts:Things you can do to minimize your bank fees
Tags: index fund, low cost index funds, time magazine
Financial myths debunked
Jennifer McClelland | RSS | Fri, Oct 23 2009 | 0 Comments
While it wouldn’t make a really good episode of the Mythbusters television show, there are myths that are prominent in the financial world that need to be debunked. Here are some of the myths that Kiplinger compiled:
Myth number 1: There is a hot market somewhere in the world. There is an idea out there that other bits of the world will grow at huge rates even when the economies of the United States or Europe have begun to fall. There is an idea out there that you can offset losses in your home country by investing abroad.
The Truth: These days, thanks to globalization, downturns in any economy can lead to downturns everywhere. No country is immune anymore.
Myth number 2: Real estate is independent and behaves differently than other types of investments. In the most recent real estate craze, many people called it a bubble instead of a boom.
The truth: Real estate will not overcome other risks when credit problems are hurting investments all across the board. Real estate cannot and is not immune.
Myth number 3: The businesses that pay reliable dividends are safer than other investments and are preferred over stocks that do not pay dividends. There are some companies out there who are counted on to increase dividend payouts regularly and, therefore, actually performed better than other stocks.
The truth: Some companies are still increasing dividends. The best way to make sure that a company is going to have stable dividends, look at the cash flow and not just how big the company is.
Myth number 4: Foreign creditors can take out the U.S. Treasury because they own $3.1 trillion of our Treasury debt.
The truth: While it is true that many foreign creditors have a lot of the United States’ debt. It is also true that the U.S. Treasury is the place to go if you want bonds that are extremely safe. That’s why in school, they teach that the rate the Treasury sets bonds at is the risk free rate.
Myth number 5: Gold is where you should put your money in a bad economy. It is now trading above $1,000. However, it has been swinging back and forth with its price over the duration of the recession. Gold seems to be in its own bubble where it does things independent of the rest of the market.
The Truth: Gold is one of the commodities that also rallies in good times. When there is credit for buyers, inflation, and buyers who actually want to go out and spend their money, gold tends to increase a bit then too. It’s not just during bad times.
Kiplinger has five more myths to debunk at their site. I’ve linked to it below.
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Tags: myth number, u s treasury, bonds
Forex and ETF Trading Courses
Jennifer McClelland | RSS | Wed, Oct 07 2009 | 4 Comments
Over the internet, it can be difficult to decide who to trust when it comes to learning about trading and investing. Your investments are the goal to your financial success and so you should definitely spend some time to find out exactly what you’re getting yourself into when you decide to invest. You should never invest blindly, with little knowledge of the market, or by going on the opinion of one person.
Forex Training Courses are important if you are looking into getting into trading foreign currency. With the right training and coursework, you can take something that seems as complicated as trading currency and even futures contracts and turn it into something you can excel in.
The Training Academy has been the most trusted name in professional trader education since 1997 and along with online courses offered by the company, it also offers on location training and courses. This is different than most training courses because many places that offer online classes are simply that, just online classes. With several locations throughout the country and worldwide, the Training Academy can offer in-person help to any students who may ask for it.
When looking around the internet, you may find plenty of places to get Forex trading information or find companies that have courses and training for all kinds of investing, but who would you rather pay; the company that has a proven track record or one that offers classes only online?
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Today’s Ebook – Study Book For Successful Foreign Exchange Dealing
Tags: internet, ftc, information
Today’s Ebook – Ten Questions to Ask When Choosing a Financial Planner
Chris McClelland | RSS | Tue, Aug 04 2009 | 0 CommentsToday’s featured e-book download is Ten Questions to Ask When Choosing a Financial Planner (347 KB, 14 pg) – A straight-forward brochure from the Certified Financial Planners on 10 questions you should ask when you look for a financial planner — an important decision that should be accompanied by important questions.
What you can learn from this booklet
Contains some important questions that any potential investor should ask when selecting a financial adviser to handle their investments. Armed with this knowledge you can fell more confident allowing someone else to choose the correct investments for you.
To download this e-book, or any of our current e-books, please visit the ebook page where you may choose the e-book(s) you wish to download. *Download an e-book by clicking on it’s title.*
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Tags: book download, investor, investments
Follow the Green Dollar Road
Michael Bowler | RSS | Thu, Jul 23 2009 | 2 Comments
For the firm believer that an investor should follow the trends to see real success in investing, it is important to know what the winners are doing right now. To understand that one needs to understand what they are looking at in the market. The first two things you must watch are real estate and unemployment. These are the absolute keys to a real recovery in the market and the economy. Until losing jobs is a thing of the past and until real estate prices stop going down, there will be pressure on our economy, end of story.
The current market is creating one of the greatest opportunities for building permanent real wealth if an investor can see the bargains. It is important to continually look for bargain-basement opportunities in the form of rock bottom prices. In addition to your own screening and research, it is important to pay attention to what those successful long-term investors are doing with their money.
Securities regulations make this very easy to do. Most finance managers are required to publicly release their holdings at the end of each quarter. By tracking portfolio changes and holdings in correlation with locations of investments, you effectively establish a makeshift research department composed of the best minds in the market. You should always do additional investigation of your own, but good research of what investors are already succeeding with is a good meeting of the minds, so to speak.
Just as an example, let’s look at Third Point LLC, the distressed and activist fund managed by Daniel Loeb. It is reported to have earned 16% or so annually without the use of much leverage, if any, just since its beginning in 1996. In his recent letter to shareholders, Loeb said he was less pessimistic about where the economy would be at the end of the quarter. The firm is letting go of what Loeb referred to as “doomsday positions” such as gold, the investments that will not stand as firm as they have once the economy moves forward. As we have established before, there is a relatively negative correlation between gold and Wall Street, simply because when Wall Street is doing poorly, gold has become the industry hiding place. When Wall Street bounces back, people bail from gold and ride the stock market back up, reducing the price of gold once again. (This explains why places like Cash4Gold are advertising the best ever prices of gold. Every active investor has bought some recently.) He said the fund is also finding long positions that offer what he called attractive opportunities.
Third Point established a new position in the home health and hospice company Amedisys in the quarter. As baby boomers age, this is going to be high-growth industry for years to come. Earnings and stock trades are up. Third Point also opened a position in Life Partners Holdings, a life insurance settlement business. Basically, it buys life insurance contracts at a discount from policyholders who are in need of funds. Life Partners then resells these contracts to retail and institutional investors. The company acts as an agent and receives a fee for its services. Earnings and stock trades are up for this company too, because death is truly recession-proof. It does appear that Third Point is leaning toward an aging population. In the last quarter it bought Wyeth, Schering-Plough and Pfizer with Pfizer coincidentally as one of the top investments right now.
Related posts:Follow the trail to your earning potential.
Tags: real estate prices, rock bottom prices, daniel loeb

