Stocks & Equities

2010′S BEST PERFORMING HEDGE FUND MANAGER’S NEXT BIG INVESTMENT IDEA

Don Browstein is a former philosophy professor, the founder of Structured Portfolio Management (named the best performing hedge fund in 2010, after returning 49.5 percent and 134.6 percent in 2009), a guy who supposedly once told a trader “The only way you can leave this firm is in a body bag” while brandishing a baseball bat, and the person his new tenants will have to answer to if next month’s rent is one day late.

Don Brownstein’s Structured Portfolio Management LLC plans to start a fund to buy and rent out homes. The firm, based in Stamford, Connecticut, may introduce the fund to investors within weeks, Brownstein said in a letter to clients dated June 12, a copy of which was obtained by Bloomberg News. He didn’t say how much capital has been raised or targeted. “There will be a significant transformation in the way in which single family homes are owned and occupied in the United States,” Brownstein said in the letter. The strategy is to acquire homes through distressed sales and rent them out profitably, perhaps to the former owner, then “sometime in the not distant future, sell the houses and reap a profit from a recovery in prices.”

….read more HERE

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What Three Decades In and Around Wall Street Has Taught Me about Investing

Including Peter Grandich’s Top Ten Biggest Investment Mistakes From: Confessions of a Wall Street Whiz Kid – Chapter 12

You’ve heard the old saying, if I only knew then what I know now? How true that really is. When I think of how I was promoted to head of investment strategy in 1987 with less than three years experience, I wonder how I managed. I spent most of my energies buying and selling stocks and foolishly believing I could continuously predict what the stock market would do, and I spent little time on learning and appreciating how money really works. It was not until I met Frank Congilose in 1998 that I was shown the real truth about money and that traditional financial planning, a process 98 percent of all investors employ (and one which is steered by “professional advisors”), is a horribly flawed process.

Back in the 80s, most professionals used a simple legal pad to show clients how to set up their “financial plans.” Nowadays, firms use fancy computer applications with all sorts of interactive charts and graphs. But in the end, whether on a legal pad or high-tech computer model, all of these “plans” do the same thing: They guess.

First, they seek a dollar number the client believes (or is shown) he or she will need to live happily ever after.  This is the first absolute guess. Once that is agreed upon, the professional advisor picks a product or products—most involve stocks, mutual funds, etc. —and, based on past performance, projects similar returns for the future in order to reach that magical happily-ever-after figure.  This is the second raw guess—a total shot in the dark as to how high or low future returns will be.

What’s wrong with this very unscientific method? Four economic factors have a major impact on any financial plan, and unless you have a crystal ball you’re simply guessing where they’ll be at any given time. They are:

  • Interest rates
  • Tax rates
  • Inflation rates
  • Rates of return

I’m going to let you in on a little secret: I can’t accurately predict the course of all four of theseand neither can anyone else except Almighty God. Therefore, despite the average plan having hypothetical assumptions of these four factors, one or more of them will not be accurately assumed. One could get lucky as some did in the 1990s when everything was doing well, but do you want to depend on good fortune to keep your fortune?  This is simply a well-established guessing game with all the bells and whistles. Make no mistake about it: traditional financial planning is a guessing game—a high-stakes round of hangman, charades, or 20 questions.

I don’t know about you, but I don’t want to leave my family’s security to chance. That’s why I was so awestruck by the process Frank Congilose introduced to me; one that employs the two most important money facts:

  • Lost Opportunity Cost
  • Velocity of Money

Let me explain: If you had $20 and lost it, how much did you lose? Twenty dollars, right? Wrong. You lost the $20 plus whatever that 20 bucks could have earned if you had it. That is a Lost Opportunity Cost (LOC). Just about everyone and every business has LOCs. The key to financial success is identifying the LOCs and putting them back on the right side of the ledger—your side!

If you were to identify about $20 a week (a few cups of latte, perhaps?) you could save, that would add up to $1000 a year in savings. But it’s so much more when you take into consideration the LOCs. By saving that $1000 per year, over 25 years you would save $25,000 plus the lost earnings on that money of over $18,000 (that’s at the modest interest rate of only 4 percent) for a total LOC of over $43,000.  At 5 percent interest, the number increases to over $50,000.  That $50K becomes part of your cash flow.

Cash flow, in case you didn’t know, is nothing more than the money that comes in and the money that goes out. If you spend more than you make you have a negative cash flow. If make more than you spend (leaving some extra) you have a positive cash flow.  Obviously, increasing the positive cash flow allows you to save more and accumulate more wealth.

No one knows more about money and cash flow than banks. They don’t produce anything yet they are able to turn one dollar into two or three or more. Here’s how it works: you deposit a dollar in the bank. The bank pays you interest on that dollar. The bank then lends your dollar out to someone else at a higher rate. How much higher depends on what type of loan the borrower takes. Not only is the rate they charge higher than they paid you, but they get to lend your dollar out two or three times on average. During the time your dollar is deposited in the bank, it may be loaned out for a car loan, personal loan, home equity loan, mortgage, or credit card. Each time the bank loans out your dollar they make money by way of charging the borrower more interest than they are paying you.

This is called the Velocity of Money, the average rate at which money is exchanged from one transaction to another.  Velocity is the frequency with which a unit of money is spent over a specific time period. The bank has taken full advantage of the velocity of money and effectively made a dollar do the work of two or three or more.  What I learned to do through the services of Frank and his associates is help people understand and take advantage of the velocity of money in their own finances just like banks do.

Another way to appreciate velocity of money is to take a penny and double it once a day. On day one you double a penny and end up with two cents. On day two you double your two cents and have four.  On day three you double your four cents and have eight…and so on. How long before you have over a million dollars? It may shock you, but it’s only 27 days. That’s right: a penny doubled each day for 27 days is worth $1,342,177.20.

Without any out-of-pocket expenses or substantial risk, you can add hundreds of thousands of dollars to your worth over a lifetime by simply capturing LOCs and employing velocity of money strategies which in turn increase cash flow.  The sooner you learn that the key to successful finances is cash flow (saving your money instead of trying to gamble on an asset’s appreciation in price to increase net worth), the better off you will be.

I have found that there are four basic ways most people approach money matters. In which group do you fall?

  1. The “No Planning” Approach

This is the person with absolutely no plan. Nothing. Nada. Wing and a prayer. Their entire plan is to worry about it tomorrow. Obviously, this is the worst-case scenario.

  1. The “Occasional Planning” Approach

This is the person who intermittently thinks about money matters and might put forth a half-hearted attempt at a plan, especially right after New Year’s, but soon the day-to-day grind of life takes over and they end up doing what the no planning group does; worry about it starting tomorrow. But tomorrow never comes.

  1. The “Needs Planning” Approach

This is the person who plans for specific events like college or a child’s wedding but does not have an overall, integrated financial plan. They at times actually progress on a specific goal only to find out they have let other important goals fall by the wayside and then try to catch up with some “Hail Mary” schemes.

  1. The True “Financial Planning” Approach

The infrequent person who seriously plans for the things life throws at us. Not just retirement, mind you, but life. Buying a home, taking vacations, saving for college and retirement, and a nest egg for those things that just crop up.

Even among those who do plan, there are speed bumps along the way.  In my three decades on Wall Street, I have seen many of the same mistakes time and time again. Here, I have assembled my list of Top Ten Biggest Investment Mistakes.

Peter Grandich’s Top Ten Biggest Investment Mistakes:

10.  “Hot Potato” buying  Buying the popular stocks of the day or the latest get-rich-quick scheme. Unless you have a crooked rabbit, the turtle always wins this race in investing.

9.  Believing publications – You see it all the time. Some magazine headline that reads “Ten sure fire ways to riches,” or “Ten stocks to beat the market,” etc., all for the low, low price of a few bucks for that issue. While there are some really useful publications, magazines likeMoney who depend mostly on financial institutions for advertisement are, in my opinion, always tilted to the cup being half full and are not truly objective.

8.  Failing to consider spouse’s views – Guilty as charged. Through my first making of millions then losing a good portion of it, my wife’s only regret was I didn’t take into account her desires and wishes. Family financial planning must be a team effort.

7.  Believing money is evil – Yes, the love of money is evil, but money itself is not. It’s a necessity but not to the point where we literally lose our eternal life with the true owner of it. Some people are afraid of it and what owning a hefty sum of it may do to them. As stated earlier, if you truly come to understand you’re only a steward with it, you are likely to do much good with it.

6.  Not fully understanding what you’re doing – The less you know, the more people who live off the less knowledgeable can thrive. God knew how important matters of money would be and dedicated a good portion of His life’s manual (the Bible) to it. Shouldn’t you make a similar effort?

5. Inability to judge worthiness of risk – Here’s a news flash; if it’s too good to be true, it’s too good to be true. If the banks are paying you 1 percent and someone says you can make 10 percent, you better know that there’s a certain degree of risk that comes with the potential. Many times the anguish of a loss far outweighs the dollar amount, and it lasts longer and impacts other areas of your life.

4. Trusting financial institutions – Despites decades of deceit and fraud throughout the financial industry, most people still place a large degree of blind trust in the financial institutions and the personnel with whom they deal. Any financial adviser worth his or her weight should have a well-documented and long track record of success or at least have numerous references. Wouldn’t you be glad to give a reference if your adviser did well for you? Run, don’t walk, from those who can’t provide them.

3. “Hope” is not an investment Strategy – When it comes to faith, hope is very good, but in investing it can be a killer. If I only had a dollar for every time I heard an investor say they’re “hoping” their stock goes back up so they can get their money back. Look, if you’re hoping the price will rise yet not willing to buy more at the reduced price, who do you expect to do so and pay up to the price you originally paid? Just hoping for these changes without sound fundamental reasons to back up that hope is a license for disaster.

2.  No written financial strategy at all – Similar to the “No Planning” approach. Like anything else at which you want to succeed, you must write it down. In the landmark book The Magic of Thinking Big, author David J. Schwartz tells us to write down our goals—all of them. Financial goals are no different. Writing your plan down not only keeps you on track but acts as a benchmark as you achieve your financial goals. One of the first things to do is to take a 30-day account of every dime you spend—and I mean everything. Almost always, people are surprised how much they spend and on what. They soon realize they can either do without some things or spend less on them.

And the number one biggest investment mistake is…….

1. Procrastination – Without a doubt, putting off dealing with matters of finance is the single biggest investment mistake. Whether it’s by accident or on purpose, delaying dealing with finances can only hurt most.

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Perhaps we can all take some advice from one of the richest men ever to walk this earth. No, not Donald Trump or Warren Buffet, but King Solomon. He was one of the Bible’s best investors.  King Solomon has a fantastic track record based on three basic biblical principles:

Principle #1 – Diversification

Divide your portion to seven, or even to eight, for you do not know what misfortune may occur on the earth. – Ecclesiastes 11:2

King Solomon knew that you don’t put all your eggs in one basket. This is especially true for those people who put all of their 401(k) savings into their company’s stock.

Principle #2 – Good Counsel

Without consultation, plans are frustrated, but with many counselors they succeed. – Proverbs 15:22

There’s no one person who can give universal counsel. Not only do you need to develop a support team, but you need to find a diverse group of a few individuals because one team member is not always aware of what another is doing and having someone quarterback all the different team players is important.

Principle #3 – Ethical Investing

The conclusion, when all has been heard, is” fear God and keep His commandments. –  Ecclesiastes 12:13

Not only should we be honest in our investments but make sure where we place our monies to be Godly. That’s different for every individual, but might include avoiding investing in businesses involved in alcohol, weapons, tobacco, or companies with questionable human rights practices.

SIDEBAR:

“Learn as if you were going to live forever.

Live as if you were going to die tomorrow.”

– Mahatma Gandhi

Remember this: on Wall Street there are bulls, bears, and pigs.  The bulls and bears each have their day, but the pigs always end up at the slaughterhouse.

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8-1-2011

The Experiment Has Failed – Are You Ready?

After about an hour’s worth of air traffic congestion delays around JFK airport, I finally departed New York City yesterday evening en route for Vilnius, Lithuania… one of my favorite inconspicuous corners of Europe.

The route took me through Helsinki, Finland for a brief connection, and I was on the ground long enough to witness something truly bizarre: a complete and utter lack of people.

I could practically count on two hands the number of passengers milling around the airport this morning during peak business hours… it was almost something out of a zombie movie.

Ordinarily I would have seen hundreds, thousands of people… and I have in the past as I’ve traversed this route many times before. And no, today was not a holiday.

Helsinki’s airport functions as a major transfer point, especially for European business travelers criss-crossing the continent or flying to Asia, which makes airport traffic an interesting proxy on the European economy (though not necessarily a reflection of Finland’s).

While a single example is not enough data to draw any significant conclusions, I mentally filed the observation as another snapshot of Europe’s deteriorating economic situation.

It reinforces what I observed here several months ago when I was last on the continent in April; it was as if a dark cloud was hanging overhead, and the general mood was absolutely sour. People seemed to be capitulating all hope and starting to make peace with the fact that their economic futures have been squandered by a stupid experiment.

Of course, I’m referring specifically to the ‘euro experiment’… however the euro is merely a symptom of a much larger experiment– that of fiat currency.

It wasn’t all that long ago that money was actually made of something scarce– a real asset that couldn’t be conjured at will by an appointed bureaucrat.

In time, money supplies grew to be controlled by governments and banking cartels in the form of worthless pieces of paper. Since then, it’s devolved further to strings of bits in a giant database; our money supply is nearly all digital.

As my friend Tim Price characterizes it, what passes as ‘money’ today is merely an abstraction of an abstraction of the real thing.

The euro experiment was merely a commingling of 17 different national fiat experiments… albeit a remarkably stupid one.

Under the normal fiat game, a country would at least have to stand on its own two feet and con(vince) the market that its particular brand of monopoly money was sound.

With the euro, even the trashiest economies in Europe were able to pass off Germany’s credibility as their own. And now, finally, after more than a decade, the market is calling that ridiculous bluff.

Spanish bond yields have risen to a euro-era record, well north of 7%. Italian bond yields are 6%. The talking heads on financial news are going bonkers… nobody can fathom these countries staying afloat with interest rates being so ‘high’. And they’re right.

What’s funny is that the 20-year average of Italian 10-year bond yields since 1993 is 5.9%. They’re currently priced at 6.06%. Italian bond yields aren’t spiking, they’re just reverting to the mean. The real spike hasn’t happened yet.

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Italy is in such dismal shape that having to borrow funds at ‘average’ rates is going to push it into insolvency… the government can only limp along if it can borrow at absurdly low rates that don’t even keep pace with inflation.

Perhaps more than anything, this shows how truly broken the system has become… and what a colossal failure the experiment has been.

Of course, before things completely break down, they’ll resort to the same old tactics that bankrupt governments have relied on in the past–outright confiscation of wealth, capital controls, and financial repression.

It’s already happening across the continent, in fact.

In Greece, the government is helping itself to people’s savings at will, in their sole discretion… and forcing businesses to ‘prove’ the tax purity of their funds.

In Italy, the government has colluded with several banks (like BNI) to freeze customers out of their accounts with no warning or explanation.

ATM limits are being imposed at many banks across the continent, and Euro leaders are openly discussing more severe controls to stem potential capital flight.

The conclusion to draw from all of this is clear: finance the government, save the banks, screw the people. This reality, coming soon to a western civilization near you.

This article was written by Simon Black and originally published at Zero Hedge

Shorts on Metals ETFs are Nearing a Big Squeeze

There has been an increasing number of investors taking short positions on gold exchange-traded funds (ETFs) – but they better watch out for what’s ahead this summer.

In fact, each day that passes brings us closer to what could be the day of reckoning for those holding massive short positions on the ETFs for gold, silver, copper and related investments.

You see, the Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City in late August will host an economic policy symposium in Jackson Hole, WY. Speaking at the conference, as he did in August of 2010 when he introduced the second round of quantitative easing, will be Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke.

There is much to believe that QE3 – if not declared sooner – could be announced at Jackson Hole. Should this happen, the prices of gold, silver and copper will likely soar like back in 2010.

That means anyone holding shorts on gold ETFs or similar investments could find themselves scrambling to cover their positions.

QE2 and Gold Prices

QE2 consisted of inflating the Federal Reserve balance sheet through the purchase of $700 billion in US Treasury bonds. QE2 ran from November 2010 to June 2011.

During that time, the PowerShares DB US Dollar Index (NYSE: UUP) slipped about 2.5%, while SPDR Gold Shares (NYSE: GLD) rose 12%, iShares Silver Trust (NYSE: SLV) 25% and iPath DJ-UBS Copper TR Sub-Index (NYSE: JCC) 7.3%, as investors piled into hard assets.

This trajectory in price trends for the greenback and metals ETFs has since reversed. The dollar index is up 6.6% since July 2011, and up about 2% over the past few months.

For the last three months, GLD is down 2%, SLV is off by nearly 12%, and JJC is down more than 13%.

Even though famed investors such as Jim Rogers and George Soros buy gold, the point of view of investing icon Warren Buffett has led his followers to remain bearish on the yellow metal. Just look at what Buffett had to say about gold in March 2011, when GLD was trading around $140.

“I will say this about gold,” said Buffett. “If you took all the gold in the world, it would roughly make a cube 67 feet on a side…Now for that same cube of gold, it would be worth at today’s market prices about $7 trillion dollars – that’s probably about a third of the value of all the stocks in the United States. For $7 trillion dollars, you could have all the farmland in the United States, you could have about seven ExxonMobils, and you could have a trillion dollars of walking-around money …Call me crazy, but I’ll take the farmland and the ExxonMobils.”

Shorts on Gold ETFs

Investors thinking like Buffett have been constructing massive short positions on gold ETFs as well as other metals-related investments.

A 5% short float is considered to be troubling. At present, there is a 4.47% short float for GLD, and 4.40% for SLV.

Short floats are much higher for individual company stocks in the industry.

For example, Eldorado Gold Corp. (NYSE: EGO) now has a short float of 27.60%. Now trading around $13.00 a share, the 52-week high for Eldorado Gold is $22.12. Before QE2 was announced in the summer of 2010, Eldorado Gold Corp was trading for under $16.

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But the monetary stimulus measures happening around the world are reason to be bullish on metals.

Central banks have been working together to bring the world out of The Great Recession, and will continue to do so. The Bank of Japan initiated a round of stimulus measures earlier this year.China appears to be on the verge of another massive program.

QE3 could soon be introduced to the world in late August at Jackson Hole by Federal Chairman Bernanke.

If so, the great sucking sound being heard around the world will be the shorts on silver, copper and gold ETFs being squeezed.

Jonathan Yates is a contributing writer for Money Morning.

20 rules that can save you from the Doomsday Cycle

Yes, they predicted doomsday three years ago. Listen: “Over the last 30 years, we have built a financial system that threatens to topple our global economic order,” wrote Simon Johnson and Peter Boone. “We have let an unsustainable and crazy ‘doomsday cycle’ infiltrate our economic system.”

This doomsday “cycle will not run forever … The destructive power of the down cycle will overwhelm the restorative ability of the government, just like it did in 1929-31.” In 2008 “we came remarkably close to another Great Depression. Next time, we may not be so lucky.”

That was 2009. Since then Johnson, former IMF chief economist, co-wrote last year’s bestseller “13 Bankers: The Wall Street Takeover and the Next Financial Meltdown” and the new “White House Burning.”

Other new books echo the same doomsday warning: Peter Schiff’s “The Real Crash: America’s Coming Bankruptcy” … Paul Krugman’s “End This Depression Now” … James Rickards’s “Currency Wars” … Philip Coogan’s “Paper Promises” … Joseph Stiglitz, “The Price of Inequity” … Ian Bremmer, “Every Nation For Itself,” and other reminders of doomsday.

Folks, the “next time” is here. Our luck is running out. And unfortunately, our leaders in both parties are blinded by an obsession to win an election. Ergo, they will fail to act in time.

….read more HERE or Read All 20 Rules HERE

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