Personal Finance

Government Stealing Brokerage Accounts

Screen Shot 2015-02-25 at 7.53.55 PMGovernment threatens to seize brokerage account over ‘too little’ activity

This is a great example of ‘sovereign risk’:

One of my close friends here in Singapore opened a brokerage account last year with Interactive Brokers.

If you’re not familiar, Interactive Brokers is a leading securities broker based in Greenwich, Connecticut. You can trade stocks, currencies, options… all that stuff.

Now, my friend is not a US resident (he lives here in Singapore), nor is he a US citizen.

He opened his account through their Asian branch in Hong Kong, funded the account from here in Singapore, and then bought some Canadian stocks listed on the Toronto stock exchange.

 

Nothing about his investments had anything to do with the United States.

So you could imagine his surprise when he received a recent email from Interactive Brokers informing him that his account was about to be “escheated to the state”.

Yeah, I had to look it up too.

It turns out that if you don’t have a specific amount of “qualifying activity” then your account is considered dormant and will be turned over to the state.

Now- my friend had bought his stocks. He was quite comfortable with his positions.

He’s not a day-trader or anything like that—he is happy to simply buy shares of undervalued companies and own for the long-term.

So he bought the shares and walked away from the account for a while—a true ‘buy and hold’ strategy.

He didn’t feel compelled to log in every day to check the price. Besides, there are only a zillion other websites where you can check stock prices.

But it was precisely for this reason—his nature of being a responsible, long-term investor—that he did not have any ‘qualifying activity’.

That’s why he received a notification from his broker saying that his account was “at risk of being classified as abandoned and subject to forfeiture. . .”

Interactive Brokers went on to write: “Based upon a review of your account UXXXX284, there has been no such qualifying activity and it is therefore subject to being classified as abandoned if you do not act quickly.”

“If we fail to hear from you the account will be escheated to the state and closed.”

Needless to say he thought is was a joke. Or spam. But it was the real thing.

Apparently the government is in pretty desperate need of cash.

More importantly, it’s a sad testament to the nature of investing today that any responsible, long-term investor is automatically presumed to be dead.

It’s as if they expect us to be like little lab rats constantly running around the financial maze looking for new crumbs of cheese.

The amazing thing is that they waited so long to send him a warning.

I mean, if he had been on vacation or not checking his email, his account would have been liquidated and turned over to the state.

He was fortunate enough to have caught it. I imagine there are plenty of others who were not so lucky.

Look, we’ve said it over and over again: Sovereign Risk is the biggest risk out there.

You cannot EVER underestimate the desperate tactics and procedures of bankrupt governments.

They’ll come up with every creative way possible to relieve you of your assets, even when it means declaring you dead and ‘escheating’ your funds to the state.

At a minimum, know the rules. (i.e. if you have a US-based brokerage account, log in right away and generate some activity).

More importantly, consider moving at least a portion of your assets abroad to a safe, stable, low-debt jurisdiction that doesn’t have the same desperation.

 
Until tomorrow, 
Signature 
Simon Black 
Founder, SovereignMan.com

SWOT Analysis: The Gold-Royalty Business Model Continues to Show Opportunity

Strengths

 

  • The minutes from the Federal Reserve’s January meeting showed that policy makers argued for keeping interest rates near record lows for longer due to both the stronger dollar and the crisis in Greece. This news favors the case for both gold and silver.
  • Mandalay Resources announced its proven and probable gold reserves were up 136 percent in 2014 as a result of the Bjorkdal mine acquisition. Richmont Mines announced revenues were up 47 percent and operating cash flow was up 689 percent in 2014.
  • Timmins Gold announced it will acquire Newstrike Capital by way of a court-approved plan. This continues the recent streak of acquisitions in the mining space.

 

Weaknesses

 

  • Alamos Gold announced that legal challenges in Turkey have increased uncertainty of the expected timing for receipt of permits for its Kirazli project.
  • According to a study of almost 100 global gold mining transactions by the Bloomberg Intelligence Metals and Mining team, valuations for gold mining deals peaked in 2011 and then fell more than 70 percent to a historical low in 2014. Mine prices fell faster than the metal due to lack of corporate interest in deals. As a result, gold mine values fell 350 percent more than the metal’s price.
  • Michael Rawlinson, Global Co-Head of Mining and Metals at Barclays, commented that while the sharp drop in oil prices has reduced costs for mining companies it has also added to uncertainty in the market and could prolong the wait for the commodity cycle to turn upwards again. This is mainly due to two unforeseen events: the drop in iron ore prices and the sudden collapse of the oil price.

 

Opportunities

2-23fh

 

  • RBC Capital Markets published a report highlighting Osisko Gold Royalties as being well positioned to outperform in the current price environment. This is due to a strong balance sheet that could allow it to pursue accretive deals as well as positive optionality in its existing portfolio. This is yet another implication of the gold-royalty business model which has outperformed the broader gold miner stocks in recent years.
  • Dundee Capital Markets initiated coverage of Klondex Mines with a “buy” rating. It highlighted that the company is positioned as a high margin and growing producer, has no material capital requirements, and that the company is forecasted to generate sizable free cash flow. Furthermore, the company’s assets host highly prospective exploration upside.
  • John Thornton, Barrick Gold’s chairman, commented that he’s planning on returning the company to its partnership culture that used to define it in its early days, underpinning much of its success. Newcrest Mining announced it is open to selling its Telfer gold and copper mine in Australia.

 

Threats

 

  • House Democrats have launched a perpetual U.S. mining reform crusade proposing measures that would force miners to pay royalties for minerals extracted from public lands and contribute to a fund for clean-up costs.
  • Sibanye’s CEO announced that the company is through with buying assets as it deems them expensive in the current environment. Nonetheless, he still sees potential for substantial synergies between companies.
  • Bank of America announced that gold may drop to $1,150 in the next few weeks citing the outlook for U.S. monetary policy.

 

http://usfunds.com/

4 Reasons Why Every Investor Needs Dividend Stocks in Their Portfolio

With interest rates near historic lows, investors have been desperately seeking yield. As a result, one of the hottest segments for investors over the last five years has been buying large companies that pay attractive dividends.

Many question whether or not this can continue. That fact is however, investing in high quality-cash producing dividend stocks is no “Johnny-come-lately” strategy. It is simple, tried & true, and has been used by some of the world’s most successful investors for over a century.

In fact, it is so simple that with the right advice, almost any investor can use it. It is likely why a financial industry that makes its’ money off creating, packaging and selling you exotic daily stock, options, commodities, and forex systems, often casts it aside. They don’t want average investors to discover the simple yet powerful wealth-builders dividend stocks can be.

Some of the world’s greatest investors including Warren Buffett will tell you to stop “trading” and start “investing.”

You need to stop playing the Wall Street game and start using the stock market, as it has been used in the past, as a distribution mechanism for the excess profits of corporations – dividends.

Here are 4 reasons why you should continue to look to high quality dividend paying stocks for superior long-term returns.

1.Dividend Stocks Have Outperformed Non-Dividend Stocks over the Long Term

A very common misconception with the investing public is that dividend stocks provide a lower, albeit safer, return on investment. This has helped dividend stocks earn an ill-conceived reputation for being boring. However, the facts present a completely different picture – dividend stocks actually outperform non-dividend stocks by a significant margin over the long term.

The chart below (from RBC Capital Markets Quantitative Research) clearly illustrates that over a 27 year time horizon, dividend stocks on the TSX Composite Index vastly outperformed their non-dividend paying counterparts. The average annual compound returns of dividend payers was 10.3% compared to 0% for companies that did not pay dividends. 

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2. Dividend Stocks Can Pay Investor’s for Being Patient – You Get Paid As You Wait

Patience is a virtue when it comes to investing, but dividends give investors a reason to be patient, even when the market is not performing. You can wait years for a good company to complete their growth plans, become accepted by the market, or to rise out of a downturn. If they are not issuing a dividend however, you may not be making a return. But if you are being paid a dividend, you are being paid to be patient. If the company struggles with any kind of market head winds, you are continuing to earn a real return on your investment.

3. Dividend Stocks Can Provide Investors with Growth as Well as Regular Cash Flow

Another common misconception about dividend stocks is that they are pure yield investments – meaning that while they provide a dividend, they also provide little or no potential for stock price appreciation. Once again, this notion is false. There are select opportunities in the market that not only pay a generous dividend, but also retain cash for re-investment into the operating business. This allows the company to grow their earnings and increase the distribution on a regular basis – these are referred to as dividend growth stocks. Not only are you receiving a higher dividend (and yield) after every increase, but you will also likely see the value of your stock price increase as well.

4. Dividends Can Help to Provide Price Support for a Stock during “Bear” Markets

A regular and safe dividend can also provide price support for a company’s stock. During a market downturn, a good company can be punished even if the financials remain intact. If the market is bearish, investors can lose short-term reasons to own non-dividend stocks. In such circumstances, the stock price will typically fall. Why own a stock in the short term if the market is against you? But a company with a stable or growing dividend presents a very compelling reason for ownership – even in a bear market – the more compelling the reason, the more stable the company’s stock price.

Again, dividends can be powerful wealth-builders and they offer the extra benefit of providing income even during market or stock pullbacks.

2/12/2015
UNDERVALUED SPECIALTY PHARMA POSTS STRONG Q1 2015, COULD RECEIVE RE-RATING HIGHER BY INVESTORS IN 2015 VIA LATEST ACQUISITION AND NEW CEO OUTLOOK – UPGRADE RATING

2/4/2015
EXTRUSION & AUTOMOTIVE MANUFACTURER REPORTS STRONG START TO 2015, DIVIDEND INCREASES 20%, ACCRETIVE ACQUISITION/EXISTING BUSINESS EXPANSION POWER GROWTH, OUTLOOK POSITIVE FOR 2015

1/16/2015
CASH RICH COMMUNICATIONS SOFTWARE & HARDWARE PROVIDER POSTS STRONG 2015, NEAR-TERM OUTLOOK IMPACTED BY LONG-TERM INVESTMENT SPEND – MAINTAIN RATING (NEW CLIENTS ESTABLISH HALF POSITIONS)

1/14/2015
CASH RICH ON-DEMAND TV SOFTWARE AND SOLUTIONS SMALL-CAP REPORTS SIGNING MAJOR CONTRACT WITH EUROPEAN TIER 1 CABLE OPERATOR, SHARES SURGE 30% – MAINTAIN SPEC BUY RATING (FOCUS BUY)

12/24/2014
CASH RICH MICRO-CAP, STRONG CASH PRODUCING UNIQUE TECHNOLOGY DRIVEN COMPANY, ZERO DEBT, LONG-TERM FOCUS– INITIATE COVERAGE

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Contrarian Economist John Mauldin: How to Position Your Portfolio to Win in the Currency Wars

Collateral damage from the currency wars in Europe, Japan and Russia could topple political leaders, put banks out of business and homeowners on the street. It can also play havoc with a portfolio. That is why The Gold Report called Mauldin Economics founder John Mauldin to ask how can readers protect themselves and perhaps even prosper.

currencywars580

The Gold ReportThe beginning of 2015 has been volatile for global currencies, not the least of which was the Swiss National Bank removing its cap on the franc versus the euro. What precipitated that and what does it mean for the Swiss franc versus other currencies going forward?

John Mauldin: The Swiss National Bank had already expanded its balance sheet to 80% of GDP to maintain the link and would have had to buy more euros if the joint currency continued to weaken. It would be similar to the U.S. Federal Reserve having a balance sheet of $13 trillion. As late as the week before the big move, the chairman and vice chairman of the Swiss National Bank announced publicly that the peg was a cornerstone and the bank would continue to maintain it. Once it became clear that some very serious quantitative easing (QE) was coming from the European Central Bank (ECB), everything changed.

Now we see that European bond buying could be on the order of €1.1 trillion, which is a relatively serious amount, and it is open ended with €60 billion a month planned until inflation hits 2%. Given all the deflationary pressures in Europe, that could be quite a long time. Consider that Japan has had massive quantitative easing for decades off and on and its nominal GDP is roughly where it was 25 years ago. The country hasn’t witnessed anything that looks like inflation, so it’s not clear to me that the move by Europe is going to be able to create inflation. 

The Swiss National Bank saw this reality and concluded it could be facing another $150 billion in losses and balance sheet expansion. There is only so much pain a central bank can handle. So it walked away from the whole euro mess. And it shocked the markets because Swiss financial leaders didn’t want to start warning people and have it leak out. They decided to get over it and deal with getting taken off the Christmas card lists later. 

TGR: Is this just the beginning of the financial moves by the Swiss? 

JM: Switzerland already lowered key interest rates and has indicated it is willing to do it again. It wouldn’t surprise me if we see a 1.5% or 2% negative factor in the future as the country puts a “you are not welcome here” mat out. Basically, it is charging you to hold Swiss francs. 

If you’re a Russian that makes a lot of sense. You can lose 75 basis points on your Swiss franc or 25–30% on your Russian ruble. Swiss francs are better than euros and dollars aren’t available. 

Other countries could follow. Denmark lowered its interest rates further into negative territory after the ECB announcement, and then lowered them again the next day. The Danes don’t want the krone to become the next currency that everybody piles into. Negative rates have arrived in about six countries now in Europe—negative out into the four-to-five-year bond range. Europe is just upside down. It doesn’t make any sense. 

TGR: Will the ECB be able to buy bonds at this rate indefinitely?

JM: Sure. The Japanese are doubling down. In an October move dubbed the Halloween Surprise, the Bank of Japan announced its open-ended commitment to quantitative easing until the economy reached 2% inflation and the yen took a big drop against the euro. After the recent QE announcement by the ECB, the euro-to-yen swap rate has gone back to where it was and the yen is even stronger! This is precisely what Germany wants because the country’s biggest competition in machine tools, robotics and automation is Japan. This is currency wars. Currency wars are not genteel, friends-and-family squabbles. This could get ugly.

TGR: Are we going to see more collateral damage from the currency wars? 

JM: Absolutely. Korea at some point will throw in the towel trying to maintain its currency against the yen. The Chinese are going to have to allow their currency to fall against the dollar, which will send some U.S. senators into a tizzy.

TGR: What about the businesses that trade in currencies? We saw a couple close overnight. Will there be more shockwaves like that for banks that are short the Swiss franc or mortgages denominated in francs? 

JM: I’m sure we’ll lose a few banks here and there. Banks are always going out of business. We’re certainly going to lose a lot of currency brokers. We will lose some hedge funds that were on the wrong side of the trade.

TGR: There have been shockwaves from the freefall of oil prices. That has impacted currencies around the world including the Russian ruble and the Canadian dollar. What could happen if the price of oil stays under $50 a barrel ($50/bbl)?

JM: It wouldn’t surprise me if we see $30/bbl before this is over. It is down 60%. That’s a pretty significant drop. I don’t think oil stays down. The marginal cost of production is probably in the $60/bbl range so my guess is at some point over the next year to year and a half it gets back to that level, but it doesn’t rise to $80 or $90/bbl. It’s not going to get back up to where a lot of countries would like to see it. I think Saudi Arabia is perfectly fine to sell its oil at $70/bbl and take market share.

TGR: Wouldn’t that have political implications in places like Russia and Venezuela?

JM: Sure. And it couldn’t happen to a better bunch of terrorists. I’m not particularly worried about how difficult a time they have. 

TGR: What about the impact in Canada, where oil is a big export product?

JM: The Canadian dollar lost parity already and leaders there are worried about the country slowing down. That is why the Bank of Canada cut its key interest rate in a surprise move earlier this month. The economy in Canada is getting softer. It is doing exactly what you would think a central bank would do. 

TGR: Should we brace for more of these surprise announcements?

JM: Typically central banks don’t do something just once. We are starting a cycle of lower rates. 

TGR: With all of the problems in Europe and China, what is supporting the dollar and the U.S. stock market climb and talk here of raising interest rates?

JM: Currencies move in long cycles. The dollar was irrationally weak not that long ago. I predicted three years ago, when the dollar was dropping and some were pointing to the Chinese currency as the next reserve currency, that the dollar would remain the strongest currency in the world. People chuckled and shook their heads, but nobody’s chuckling or shaking their heads anymore.

The dollar is going to get a great deal stronger. Oil production in the U.S. is part of the rising dollar. We’re keeping more of our petrodollars. When oil gets back to the $65/bbl range, you’re going to be surprised how much production comes back in the shale oil fields. The cost of taking oil out of the ground is falling every quarter. Lower demand is cutting the price of drill rigs and salaries are getting back to normal. It’s going to get cheaper. There are silver linings to the drop in oil prices as opportunities open up. There is a lot more oil out there and at $65/bbl it will be profitable. 

TGR: If oil floats between $30/bbl and $70/bbl, can the U.S. stock market continue to go up or is this a bubble and we’re waiting for it to pop?

JM: No, it’s not a bubble. We don’t have ridiculous valuations. We could see a correction just as we see in any move, but not a serious one like 2008 or 2001 until we have another recession. I think the next recession will also be the end of the secular bear market, but you just never know what the markets are going to do. The market will do whatever it can to create the most pain for the most number of people. 

TGR: What does all of this mean for gold? 

JM: If you’re in Japan or Europe, you probably want to be buying gold because it’s a bull market in those currencies. 

I have never been an investor in gold. I am a buyer and believer in insurance gold. I think you ought to own some gold in your portfolio as central bank insurance. The day will come when the dollar will turn and our central bank will start doing QE again because that’s what central banks do. Then we’ll have another bull market run and it will get a new resetting for a new valuation. You know what I’ll do with my gold? Absolutely nothing. It’ll sit there gathering dust. 

My point is if I ever use my gold, that’s not a good sign for me personally. It either means that something really bad is happening in my life and I need the one thing I can convert to ready cash or the world is going to hell in a handbasket. My great hope is that I give my gold to my great grandkids and they look at me and ask what those shiny coins represent because that would mean the world turned out really well. But I like the insurance just in case it goes the other way. 

TGR: What about other commodities? 

JM: Other commodities are telling us the world has built up too much capacity and we’re in a deflationary world. Nearly all the metals have gone down. Copper is way down. That is an indication of slower global growth for 2015.

TGR: What alternative investments do you like? 

JM: My biggest personal winners for the last two years have been my short yen trades. I basically took my mortgage and hedged it in terms of yen with 10-year put options. I have been killing it with that and some funds that are basically short the Japanese government (not Japanese stocks, which I like!)

TGR: When we talked last time you also were excited about biotech stocks.

JM: I am a big believer in biotech. I think we’re going to see some biotech stocks just breathtakingly go through the ceiling. Now there will be more that go to zero so you have to be very selective and thoughtful about what you do. 

TGR: Any final words of wisdom for our readers, investors who are trying to figure out how to protect themselves with all of these currency wars?

JM: Long-term growth in your portfolio will only come from long-term growth in the global markets. Japan, Europe, China and the emerging markets are all going to have a crisis in the next five years. In the U.S. we will have to figure out in 2016 how we want to structure our country. Debate will center on questions such as: What do our taxes look like? What does our regulatory environment look like? We’re going to get to make a decision as a country. It could either be massively bullish or not. 

Your core game plan has to be positioning yourself to take advantage of volatility. How can you take advantage of these rolling crises? You want to be able to have a strategy that’s going to let you go long and short, move in and out on a rolling basis. You have to be long global growth. 

TGR: Thank you for your time.

John MauldinJohn Mauldin is an economist and financial writer of the New York Timesbest-selling books “Bull’s Eye Investing,” “Just One Thing,” and “Endgame.” His most recent book is “The Little Book of Bull’s Eye Investing.” Mauldin’s free weekly e-letter, Thoughts from the Frontline, is one of the most widely distributed investment newsletters in the world. Launched in 2000, it was one of the first publications to provide investors with free, unbiased information and guidance.

Mauldin is also the chairman of Mauldin Economics, and president of Millennium Wave Advisors, an investment advisory firm registered with multiple states. As a highly sought-after market pundit, Mauldin is a frequent contributor to publications such as The Financial Timesand The Daily Reckoning and is a regular guest on CNBC, Yahoo! Daily Ticker and Breakout, and Bloomberg TV and Radio.

Want to read more Gold Report interviews like this? Sign up for our free e-newsletter, and you’ll learn when new articles have been published. To see a list of recent interviews with industry analysts and commentators, visit our Streetwise Interviews page.

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DISCLOSURE: 
1) JT Long conducted this interview for Streetwise Reports LLC, publisher of The Gold Report, The Energy Report, The Life Sciences Report and The Mining Report, and provides services to Streetwise Reports as an employee.
2) John Mauldin: I was not paid by Streetwise Reports for participating in this interview. Comments and opinions expressed are my own comments and opinions. I had the opportunity to review the interview for accuracy as of the date of the interview and am responsible for the content of the interview. 
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5) From time to time, Streetwise Reports LLC and its directors, officers, employees or members of their families, as well as persons interviewed for articles and interviews on the site, may have a long or short position in securities mentioned. Directors, officers, employees or members of their families are prohibited from making purchases and/or sales of those securities in the open market or otherwise during the up-to-four-week interval from the time of the interview until after it publishes.

 

Comparing the inflated cost of living today from 1938 to 2015

Take a look at the cost of living in 1938:

cost-of-living-1

….continue reading HERE