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You’re Broke Because You Want to Be
Posted on February 28th, 2012 No commentsYou’re Broke Because You Want to Be
by Alexander Green, Investment U Chief Investment Strategist
Monday, February 27, 2012: Issue #1717A few years ago, my family and I signed up with a local charitable organization to buy Christmas presents for kids whose families could not afford them. We were assigned a local family we had never met.
The charity told us how many boys and girls were in the household, along with their names and ages. My kids and I had a grand time shopping for their presents – and my wife Karen, being the good sport, spent hours wrapping them.
A couple weeks before Christmas, we called the family, got directions and arranged a time to come over. The next day, I loaded up my family and the gifts. We drove across town and parked in front of a modest house in a “wrong-side-of-the-tracks” neighborhood. My kids were so excited to be delivering presents they could barely contain themselves.
When the family answered the door, their kids starting cheering, my kids starting acting rambunctious, and the parents, of course, invited us all to come inside. When we did, I couldn’t help noticing a couple things. One, while the home itself was rather plain, there was a towering stack of DVDs next to the television set. (I’m talking a mini Eiffel Tower of DVDs.) And, secondly, there were two huge bird cages in the living room, each holding a majestic, beautifully-colored macaw. There was a 50-gallon aquarium filled with tropical fish, too.
Quite frankly, that bothered me. Why, I kept asking myself, was I buying Christmas presents for a family with hundreds of dollars worth of DVDs and thousands of dollars worth of exotic birds? Perhaps I was wrong, but that evening I left their house feeling like someone had stamped the word “sucker” on my back.
A Harsh Reminder
I was reminded of this the other day when I was browsing through a bookstore at Miami International and my eyes fell on a new book titled You’re Broke Because You Want to Be.
It’s written by Larry Winget, a fellow who calls himself “The Pitbull of Personal Development,” whatever that means. Although I’ve never seen it, he is also the star of A&E’s reality series “Big Spender,” where – in cahoots with family members – he ambushes over-extended consumers in the middle of a shopping spree and offers a plan to straighten out their lives financially.
Flipping through the book, I couldn’t help but chuckle every few pages. This guy is funny. And he offers “tough love” financial advice to out of control borrowers and spenders.
He starts out by assuring readers that his title is not meant to insult the poor. “Broke is not a condition like being poor,” he writes. “Broke is a situation you find yourself in because you are either underearning or overspending.”
When it comes to saving and spending, Winget doesn’t believe people have money problems. Instead, they have behavior problems. And he doesn’t bother with any sweet talk. “I’m not the guy you go to so he can put his arm around you and say, ‘That’s okay, it will be alright.’ I’m the guy you go to when you are circling the drain.”
Winget says people who are sinking financially should forget about thinking positive thoughts and start taking positive action. “No one else is to blame for your situation,” he writes. “Broke didn’t sneak up on you in the night. A stack of unpaid bills didn’t show up while you weren’t looking. You didn’t suddenly get behind. You chose to spend your money the way you did. Your life is a reflection of the choices you have made. If you want a better life, start making better choices.”
Winget knows what he’s talking about. He grew up in Oklahoma so poor he had only one pair of pants to wear to school every day. When he got rich later in life, his business went under and he was forced to file personal bankruptcy. Within a few years, he was a multi-millionaire again.
He warns readers that there is no easy way to financial solvency. You either have to make more, spend less, or both. His book discusses dozens of blunt suggestions like these: Cut up the credit cards. Give up cable television. Get a cheaper car. Move. Give up your home phone – and get a new cell phone plan. Cut your insurance expense. Give up your high-speed internet connection. Stop eating out. Stop going out. Give up the salon. Drop the gym membership. Stop smoking. Sell stuff, “including the DVD collection.” (And perhaps the exotic birds, too.) He also has sensible advice about how readers can upgrade their skills and earn more.
Winget says, “I am not a blow-smoke-up-your-skirt, you-can-do-anything-with-a-positive-attitude kind of guy. I am a nose-to-the-grindstone, no-excuses-will-be-accepted kind of guy.”
This is a small book, but it packs a powerful punch. And perhaps its most important message is this: “Life is not made up of the haves and the have-nots – but rather the wills and the will-nots.”
This is a philosophy most Investment U readers have already adopted and put into practice. But, if you’re like me, you may have a circle of friends, co-workers, kids, or grandkids who are learning the hard way – or soon will be.
Do them a favor and tell them about this book. It’s blunt. It’s plainspoken. But if you really care about them, send it to them anyway. Perhaps anonymously, but send it.
Good Investing,
Alexander Green
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Why Stock Investing is Like Skiing
Posted on February 25th, 2012 No commentsWhy Stock Investing is Like Skiing
by Alexander Green, Investment U Chief Investment Strategist
Friday, February 24, 2012: Issue #1716Over President’s Day weekend, I took my family to Massanutten Ski Resort in the beautiful Virginia Mountains. (It’s not Telluride, but when you have an eight-year-old son who yells “Woo-Hoo!” all the way down the slopes, it really doesn’t matter.)
We had admittedly low expectations for skiing when we arrived. It’s been an unusually warm winter and the snowfall has been virtually nil. Yet the night before we skied, the snow dumped fast and furious on top of the base of artificial snow.
The next day we woke up to a winter wonderland. Everything was covered with snow. The sun was shining. And it ended up being a perfect day. I couldn’t help thinking this was a lot like the stock market.
Here’s what I mean…
As well as being the Chairman of Investment U, I’m also the Chief Investment Strategist for The Oxford Club – a private fellowship for investors trying to achieve and maintain financial independence.
And our club has won numerous industry awards for editorial excellence. (The independent Hulbert Financial Digest ranks us among the top-performing investment letters in the nation for 10-year performance.) Yet much of our success actually comes from being well positioned to take advantage of completely unexpected circumstances.
Right now, for instance, the nearly two dozen recommendations in our Oxford Trading Portfolio are up an average of 43%, even though our average holding period is just 188 days.
Our portfolio is beating the market by a wide margin for two primary reasons:
- The first is that we have a proven system for identifying great companies at attractive prices.
- The second is that we don’t try to time the market. So when it suddenly puts on an impressive rally, as it has over the last three months (tacking on more than 1,500 points), we’re set to enjoy the benefits.
I don’t have a crystal ball. And neither does anyone else. Three months ago, we couldn’t have told you that the market was about to power higher. And two weeks ago, when I made my reservations for a mountain villa at Massanutten, I couldn’t have known that the skies would suddenly open up. But in both cases, it did.
Of course, stocks might not have rallied and the snow might not have fallen. But at least we took a chance. Successful investing is about hedging your bets, taking intelligent risks and being prepared for whatever happens.
Folks who wait for that mythical day when the investment landscape looks perfect will regret it. Just as those who wait for ideal conditions before planning a ski trip will find the fares are higher, the lift lines are longer or, if they wait too long, the snow is already gone.
Market bears will counter that the conditions may look right today, but that can change quickly. I don’t disagree. But we’ve thought about that, too.
We own plenty of investments outside the stock market, so our performance isn’t based on equities alone. We abide by strict position-sizing rules to limit our risk. And we run a trailing stop behind all of our stocks, assuring ourselves that our profits don’t slip through our fingers.
It’s not a perfect system, but it works, delivering high returns during the good times and protecting capital during the bad ones.
It sure beats sitting at home… wondering if it will snow.
Good Investing,
Alexander Green
Alexander Green Business/Finance, Chairman of Investment, Chief Investment Strategist, Derivatives, Finance, Financial economics, Financial ratios, Financial regulation, Futures contract, Hospitality/Recreation, Investment, Mathematical finance, Oxford Club, President, Short, Short selling, Technical analysis, The Oxford Club, Virginia Mountains -
Is it a Good Time to Invest in Stocks?
Posted on February 21st, 2012 No commentsIs it a Good Time to Invest in Stocks?
by Alexander Green, Investment U Chief Investment Strategist
Monday, February 20, 2012: Issue #1712More than two thousand years ago, the Greek sage and philosopher Epictetus counseled, “It is impossible for anyone to begin to learn what he thinks he already knows.”
Nowhere is this truer than in the stock market. You need only ask the many thousands of investors who have sat out an historic rally – the market has doubled from its lows years ago – because they just knew stock prices were only going to go lower.
That mindset has proved to be an expensive one. Yet these individuals now face another test.
If they jump into stocks today, having already missed one enormous move, they risk being in for the next leg down. That would hurt. On the other hand, if they continue to sit on the sidelines – earning next to nothing in bonds or cash – the market may well power higher and leave them with an even more extreme choice in the weeks and months ahead.
What is the prudent investor to do?
They Rise and They Fall
The first is to understand the error of your ways. Every market timer believes that if he sits patiently on the sidelines, he will get a better opportunity to buy stocks at lower prices.
And they often do. Unfortunately, they generally get to feeling so good about missing the downdraft that they convince themselves that the market will keep falling.
And, again, if often does. Until, of course, it doesn’t.
As the market climbs, they begin to rationalize that this is just “a bear market rally” or “a dead-cat bounce.” Until it becomes obvious that the train left the station and they’re still standing on the platform.
Cash is Not King, but Stocks Might Be
Warren Buffett’s mentor Benjamin Graham once said that no investor should have more than 75% of his money in stocks or less than 25%.
That’s a good rule of thumb. Seventy-five percent keeps you from getting overly enthused when times are good. And twenty-five percent keeps you from throwing in the towel when times are bad.
But what do you do now if you’re one of those who has played it too cautious until now and are fed up with your negative real returns in Treasury bonds or cash?
First, stop justifying what you’ve done and get off the dime. Start committing money to high-quality stocks in a gradual way. After all, if you shift a big percentage of your portfolio into stocks right now, you could regret it. And if you remain in cash, you could regret that, too.
So hedge yourself. Start moving money into stocks at regular intervals, being sure to keep buying if the market dips so you get better entry prices.
An Easy Way to Start Investing
A conservative place to start would be the Vanguard High Dividend Yield ETF (NYSE: VYM). True, it currently yields just 2.9%, but that’s still 50% more than 10-year Treasuries are paying and 50 times as much as the average money market fund.
Even if stocks go nowhere over the next 10 years – highly unlikely given the decade we just had – you’d still be better off in this fund than in a bond or money market fund.
There are a ton of reasons to put off making this move from the state of the economy to the size of the deficit. But that’s just the kind of thinking that got you stuck on the sidelines.
Look at the bright side. Inflation and interest rates are low. We’ve had five straight months of declines in the jobless rate. The ECB has extended three-year, low-cost loans to European banks. The Greek parliament has voted to actually cut spending. And we’re in a period of all-time record corporate profits.
So cast off. As the great nineteenth-century theologian William Shedd pointed out, “A ship in harbor is safe, but that is not what ships are built for.”
Good Investing,
Alexander Green
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Picking High-Growth Companies: How to Find the Next Apple
Posted on February 18th, 2012 No commentsPicking High-Growth Companies: How to Find the Next Apple
by Alexander Green, Investment U Chief Investment Strategist
Friday, February 17, 2012: Issue #1711Apple’s share price exceeded $500 this week, giving it the largest market cap of any U.S. company.
Apple (Nasdaq: AAPL) so successfully sells computers, phones and other electronic gadgets that recently announced fourth-quarter profits soared 118% on a 73% increase in revenue. This is unheard of for a $475-billion company.
To put this in perspective, earnings at the companies in the S&P 500 stock index are on track to post a 6.6% year-on-year rise for the fourth quarter. Yet once Apple’s earnings are factored out, the expected fourth-quarter gain shrivels to just 2.8%. This so skews results that many Wall Street analysts are now stripping Apple from the index before weighing valuations and making forecasts.
Of course, it’s just a matter of time before Apple’s torrid growth begins to wane. It’s not possible for $500-billion companies to keep growing at the rate of $5-billion companies… or even $50-billion companies.
So the key is to search for the next Apple. But how do you find it?
Fortunately, the factors that make a great-performing stock are well known and have been intensively studied by academics and researchers. We know the key characteristics that top-performing stocks generally possess before making their parabolic moves up.
Here are just a few:
- Double-digit sales growth. You can only grow the bottom line for so long by cutting costs. Every business needs to have healthy top-line growth before it can generate robust and sustainable long-term earnings growth. Note that sales at Apple jumped 73% last quarter.
- At least 25% quarterly earnings growth. In an economy as weak as this one, most companies can’t meet these first two hurdles. But, again, Apple is seeing earnings growth at more than four times this rate.
- A return on equity of 17% or more. Return on equity – an excellent measure of management’s efficiency with capital – is calculated by dividing earnings per share by book value per share. (This is one of Warren Buffett’s key metrics, too.) Note that Apple’s return on equity is a whopping 46%.
- New products and services. Apple is the king of innovation, regularly bringing out not just new versions of products but entirely new products: iPods, iTunes, iPhones and iPads.
- High-quality management. Never forget that every company is essentially a team of people. And just as every great sports franchise needs a highly qualified coach, so does each company require a visionary leader. Apple’s co-founder and former CEO Steve Jobs was one of the greats. Now that he’s gone, it will be interesting to see how the new management performs.
- Institutional support. The vast majority of shares traded on the major exchanges are mutual funds, hedge funds, pension plans and endowments. You want to own the same stocks the institutions are buying. And, indeed, institutions own more than 70% of Apple’s outstanding shares.
These are some of the key criteria that companies need to meet to generate superior long-term returns for shareholders.
We may not see another company in our lifetimes that transforms the business landscape the way Apple has. But there are plenty of great innovators out there, including Amazon (Nasdaq: AMZN), Google (Nasdaq: GOOG), Genentech, eBay (Nasdaq: EBAY), Costco (Nasdaq: COST) and Intuitive Surgical (Nasdaq: ISRG).
These companies – and others like them – are likely to be among the best-performing stocks in the years ahead.
Good Investing,
Alexander Green
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World’s Most Contrarian Investment
Posted on February 13th, 2012 No commentsWorld’s Most Contrarian Investment
by Alexander Green, Investment U Chief Investment Strategist
Monday, February 13, 2012: Issue #1707How do you identify great contrarian investment opportunities?
Two ways. First, rather than limiting yourself to your national borders, you seek out opportunities worldwide. Next, you insist on two essential factors: abject pessimism and extreme valuations. That’s exactly what we have in European stocks today.
Ask your friends and neighbors which stocks in Europe they’re buying right now and they’ll ask you to sit down so they can feel your forehead. After all, no one in his right mind would buy stocks in a region where socialist policies reign, economic growth is almost nonexistent and the currency – the euro – is coming apart at the seams, right?
Wrong. The fact that almost no one is enthusiastic about Europe right now – indeed, most see it as a ticking time bomb – tells you that sentiment is entirely negative.
How about valuations? Those are compelling, too. The benchmark MSCI Europe Index, for example, currently sells for just 9.8 times estimated 2012 earnings, versus an average of 17 times earnings over the past 25 years. Plus, the drop in prices has boosted the dividends on many of the well-known global companies based in Europe.
Lower Values, Higher Dividends…
In sum, you have low valuations, high dividends and extremely negative sentiment. Yet the vast majority of investors reading these words won’t plunk a dime in these markets. (And, if history is any guide, a year or two from now they’ll scratch their heads and say they just can’t fathom how European stocks could have rallied so strongly.)
Not that buying contrarian investments in this troubled region doesn’t present some risks. After all, the European Central Bank (ECB) is propping up troubled banks. Many Eurozone countries are teetering on the brink of recession. And there’s a decided lack of bold political leadership in the region.
But the good news is that all these factors are already well known and fully priced into European stocks. (That’s why they’re so darn cheap.) Meanwhile, the U.S. economy has stabilized – reducing a big risk to the global economy – and the ECB has at least addressed liquidity problems at the banks.
Plus, a weaker euro is actually boosting the earnings prospects for the many companies that export to other parts of the world where economic growth (and currencies) are stronger.
Prime examples are:
So how do you play this contrarian investment opportunity? One of the best ways is with a low-cost, Europe-focused ETF like the Vanguard MSCI Europe Fund (NYSE: VGK). It’s easily the least expensive ETF in the sector with annual expenses of just .14%.
Companies in the U.K. account for around 34% of VGK’s assets, while France, Germany and Switzerland make up approximately 40%. The fund holds more than 450 stocks, but a quarter of its $2.4-billion portfolio is in its top 10 holdings, which include Vodafone, Royal Dutch Shell and HSBC Holdings. You’ll earn a 4.4% dividend here.
If you want to benefit even more from a potential slingshot recovery in these markets, try the WisdomTree Europe SmallCap Dividend Fund (NYSE: DFE). It keeps a third of its assets in smaller British companies and the rest in small-cap stocks in the Eurozone.
Remember, when an equity market rallies, the small-cap issues generally outperform larger stocks. And your contrarian investment will get a whopping 5.8% dividend here.
So there you have it, two great ways to play one of the most compelling opportunities in the world right now. Of course, most investors simply cannot bring themselves to invest against the herd. That’s how they got stuck in internet stocks a decade ago and residential real estate five years ago.
It’s also why this is perhaps one of the best contrarian investment opportunities today.
Good Investing,
Alexander Green
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The Ultimate Alternative Investment?
Posted on February 11th, 2012 No commentsThe Ultimate Alternative Investment?
by Alexander Green, Investment U Chief Investment Strategist
Friday, February 10, 2012: Issue #1706Last week I spoke at an investment conference at Rancho Santana, a charming resort community on the Pacific coast of Nicaragua, near the town of San Juan del Sur.
Set on more than two miles of coastline with rolling hills and dramatic cliffs, the reserve attracts expats, investors, surfers and nature lovers from all over the world. They like the idea of owning a piece of – or at least visiting – one of the most spectacular stretches of coastal land in the world.
Some are attracted because the property is so inexpensive. It’s hard to believe you can buy a stunning home site directly on the Pacific Ocean for less than $175,000.
And it’s not just the property that’s inexpensive. One evening 14 of us rode into town to have dinner at a favorite local restaurant, Yolanda’s. The proprietor served up heaping helpings of local lobster, fresh vegetables, black beans and rice, plantains and plenty of Corona beer. When I picked up the tab, I was shocked. The cost was less than $9 a person.
Some investors here are banking on increased foreign investment and commercial development. The International Monetary Fund estimates that Nicaragua’s economic growth hit 4% last year… and is on the verge of accelerating.
Exports jumped 23% last year. Tourism is up. MSN Money ranked Nicaragua at the top of their list of “Ten Exotic Retirement Spots for 2011,” telling readers “[Now] is the time to put this country at the top of your super-cheap overseas retirement list.” CNN Money calls it “the next Costa Rica.” Indeed, Rancho Santana is just 50 miles north of the Costa Rican border.
Good things are happening locally, too. A local business leader plans to invest $300 million next door in a world-class marina, golf and spa resort called Guacalito. Due to open in Spring 2013, it’s located just 30 minutes from Rancho Santana and is already bringing increased investment and improved infrastructure to the region. And an international airport is planned for the Tola area, located less than a half hour away.
Other investors are putting money to work here for privacy reasons. They want to diversify their portfolios beyond the prying hands of angry ex-spouses or potential litigants.
But for most, it’s the sheer beauty of the place. The New York Times points out that, “The beaches are among the finest in the Americas, and among the least developed.” Gaze out from atop one of the many bluffs on this 2,700-acre reserve and you’ll see what the coast of California looked like a hundred years ago, pristine and largely undeveloped.
Residential lots are selling quickly. Over 50 homes have been built and 24 more are under construction. It’s not hard to see why. The terrain is such that home sites can capture views of the ocean, the nearby valley and lovely sunsets. Labor costs are significantly lower here. And a master association and various sub-associations exist so that owners are assured that high and consistent standards of quality are maintained.
Is oceanfront property in Nicaragua the ultimate alternative investment? That’s for you to decide. But if you’d like to learn more, feel free to visit the website or, better yet, sign up for a property tour.
The cost is $500 per person ($600 per couple) and includes all transportation, breakfast and three nights in oceanfront accommodations at Rancho Santana. This is a great trip for those wanting to come down and investigate investment, second home or retirement opportunities. (Contact Bryan McMandon.)
In the interest of full disclosure, Rancho Santana is being developed, in part, by colleagues of mine at Agora Publishing. However, I am not compensated in any way (directly or indirectly) for any sales at the development. I just think it’s a beautiful place and an interesting investment.
And whether you decide to invest or not, I know you’d enjoy the experience.
Good Investing,
Alexander Green
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The Best Investment You Can Make In Four Minutes
Posted on February 7th, 2012 No commentsThe Best Investment You Can Make In Four Minutes
by Alexander Green, Investment U Chief Investment Strategist
Monday, February 6, 2012: Issue #1702
What if you could reach total financial independence in just four minutes a day?
If that sounds unrealistic, stay tuned. Because in the weeks ahead, our panel of experts at Investment U is going to show you exactly how it’s done. Best of all, it won’t cost you a dime. After all, this service is free.
It’s a shame, really, that the average person graduates from high school and still doesn’t truly understand compound interest, or adjustable-rate mortgages or what a 401(k) is. Far fewer still know how to navigate the world’s treacherous but lucrative financial markets.
Since financial literacy and advanced money management skills aren’t taught in school, many men and women follow a predictable path when it comes to investing.
First, realizing they don’t know enough to risk their saving without potentially making huge mistakes, they turn to a stockbroker, insurance agent or mutual fund salesman for advice.
Not good. Many people in the financial industry are peddling advice that is pedestrian, self-serving, far too expensive or all three. Expect to hear these folks tell you, for example, that full-load mutual funds, whole life insurance and high-cost variable annuities are the best things since night baseball.
After a few years, the typical customer realizes that he’s dealing not with a fiduciary but a salesman – and a primary reason he’s not doing well is that his broker is doing too well.
That’s when many investors make their next predictable move. They transfer their account to a discount broker like E-Trade or Charles Schwab.
And while a discounter is a whole lot cheaper than a full-service broker, it quickly becomes apparent that the customer isn’t a professional money manager himself and – truth be told – really doesn’t know that much about what he’s doing.
The typical discount customer ends up with a few winners and a few losers, but doesn’t know when to sell them or why. At the end of the year, he looks at his statement and sees he isn’t much closer to his financial goals – if, indeed, he ever took the time to set any.
This brings many investors (older, wiser and generally poorer) to the conclusion that they do need qualified help, just not from a salesman in a transaction-based relationship.
Eventually, hundreds of thousands of investors turn to Investment U, the free, Web-based source for men and women seeking to achieve and maintain total financial freedom.
Proven Principles Don’t Change
We do something virtually no one else does. Investment U provides daily commentary and analysis about today’s fast-moving financial markets, but always with the objective of tying our advice to timeless investment principles.
Economies expand and contract. Currencies rise and fall. Governments come and go. Markets zig and zag. But proven investment principles don’t change.
Yet the sad fact is that most investors have never learned them. They’re trying to ace Trigonometry without having mastered Algebra 1. Why don’t you have the crucial knowledge you need? Because schools don’t teach it and telling the unvarnished truth isn’t conducive to selling high-priced financial products.
As Vanguard founder John Bogle likes to say, “It’s amazing how difficult it is for a man to understand something if he’s paid a small fortune not to understand it.”
We don’t have conflicts like that here. We don’t charge commissions or fees. We don’t want to “capture your assets.”
Yes, Investment U offers premium services to subscribers. (We couldn’t support a free e-letter forever if we didn’t.) But there is never any obligation to buy and any purchase comes with a free-trial period and a money-back guarantee.
So stick with us. In the weeks ahead, we are going to reveal big dividend plays, high-yield bonds, undervalued currencies, ultra-cheap commodities, risk-reduction techniques, and proven strategies to prevent losses, protect gains and navigate today’s volatile investment environment.
Best of all, we’re going to do all this with a single goal in mind: To show you the shortest, most direct route to total financial independence.
The only commitment it requires from you is four minutes a day. That’s how long it takes the average reader to finish our daily column.
The service is free. But the knowledge is priceless.
Good Investing,
Alexander Green
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Investing in Alternative Assets
Posted on February 4th, 2012 No commentsInvesting in Alternative Assets
by Alexander Green, Investment U Chief Investment Strategist
Friday, February 3, 2012: Issue #1701Rarely have Americans faced a more challenging investment landscape.
Bonds yield next to nothing. Money markets pay literally nothing. Residential real estate is swamped in a flood of short sales and foreclosures. Gold – after climbing six-fold over the last 12 years – may have topped out. And stocks are gyrating madly.
Given all this, where does the prudent investor put his money to work?
That’s what I asked Rick Pfeifer, an Oxford Club Pillar One Advisor and Senior Portfolio Manager with Fund Advisors of America, a Maitland, Florida-based money management firm, in a recent interview:
Q: Rick, the typical investor is disgusted with the yields on bonds and cash and scared to death of the stock market. What are you saying to clients?
A: I’m telling them that now is an excellent time to take a portion of their portfolio and diversify into alternative assets: convertible bonds, preferred shares, foreign currencies, hedge positions, ultra-cheap commodities and so on.
Q: Okay, let’s take these one at a time. What are you buying now and why?
A: We recently launched a managed account for individual investors that we call The Global Hedge Portfolio. The idea is not to replace your traditional stock and bond portfolio, but to offer a complement to it. We’re seeking profits in investments that don’t move in lockstep with either the S&P 500 or Lehman’s Treasury Index.
Q: Give me a couple of “for-instances.”
A: Take the situation in the Eurozone, for example. We see European leaders and the European Central bank doing a whole lot of talking, but we don’t see genuine, concrete steps toward solving the huge fiscal problems in Southern Europe. Some might even argue that the reason they haven’t yet taken serious corrective steps is because their options are so limited. Italy, for example, is simply too big an economy to bail out, in my view. My co-strategist Greg Galloway and I forecast that the euro will fall to parity with the dollar within 12 months. So we are short the euro in our Global Hedge Portfolio.
Q: Can’t fault your thinking there. I’ve been saying much the same thing for months now. What else are you doing?
A: We’re investing in overlooked asset classes with plenty of upside potential. Take timber, for example. Over the long run, investments in timber have beaten stocks by about 4% annually – and with considerably less volatility. Plus, timber is uncorrelated to stocks, making it an excellent way to balance your portfolio. One timber trust we own is seeing revenue grow 23% annually. Operating margins top 24%. And we’re getting a 3.5% dividend yield, too.
Q: What else are you buying?
A: We’re finding bargains in certain international markets, particularly Asia and Latin America. Because domestic demand there is growing, these areas are largely immune to problems here at home and in the Eurozone. For example, we’re buying an Asian auto manufacturer that’s selling for just half of annual sales. It’s trading at a substantial discount to book and should easily triple its earnings this year. We’re also picking up undervalued oil assets in Brazil, high-yielding energy trusts in Canada, a high-quality wine maker in Chile and the world’s leading food company, denominated in Swiss francs.
Q: How about metals?
A: We’re not buying commodities directly. Instead, we’re buying metal producers that appear undervalued and have big dividends attached.
Q: What about gold?
A: I don’t know what gold is going to do and I don’t think anyone else knows, either. But some gold producers are selling at mouth-watering prices right now, even if gold goes nowhere. One of our favorites yields 10% right now. If gold takes off, great. But if it moves sideways for a while, a 10% yield makes it a comfortable wait.
Q: What if gold moves south?
A: We run trailing stops on our investment positions. That gives us unlimited upside potential with strictly limited downside risk.
Q: Anything else you really like?
A: Quite a few things, really. I’ll mention one. Residential real estate is a mess, not only in the United States but in many overseas markets, as well. But we’re finding real bargains in commercial real estate in select overseas markets. Of course, we’re not buying the buildings themselves. Our investments are totally liquid. And, in addition to potential share price appreciation here, some of the assets are currently yielding more than 7%.
Q: Good to know, Rick. And an excellent reminder that for investors who are willing to invest worldwide, there are always opportunities available somewhere. Thanks for sharing your thoughts with us today, Rick.
A: Any time. It’s my pleasure.
Good Investing,
Alexander Green
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Healthcare: The Hottest Stock Market Sector in 2012
Posted on January 31st, 2012 No commentsHealthcare: The Hottest Stock Market Sector in 2012
by Alexander Green, Investment U Chief Investment Strategist
Monday, January 30, 2012: Issue #1696Too many investors are focused on high unemployment, weak economic growth, problems in the Eurozone and runaway deficit spending. They seldom note the positives, including low inflation, rock-bottom interest rates, falling food and energy prices (coal and natural gas), expanding opportunities in emerging markets, low valuations and – not least of all – all-time record corporate profits.
So don’t let the doomsayers get you down. There are always opportunities out there, even during the most difficult economic times.
The Healthcare Sector in 2012
In particular, I see the planets aligning for medical technology right now. Why? Baby Boomers are moving into their golden years (and will soon need more healthcare services). Product innovation is continuing apace. Hospitals and clinics are busy upgrading their technology to cut costs, increase safety and minimize errors. And the healthcare sector is less sensitive to the vagaries of the business cycle.
Let me use just one example from my Oxford Trading Portfolio: Cerner Corp. (Nasdaq: CERN).
Cerner makes systems that automate records in hospitals and doctors’ offices. This is much more efficient than handwritten notes. It’s also much safer.
Automation reduces errors. Doctors – famous for illegible handwriting – can cause the wrong drug to be inadvertently dispensed at a hospital or pharmacy. They can forget to renew old prescriptions. Cerner prevents that.
The company is also a leader in billing software, with a much wider range of offerings than any of its competitors. For example, its scalable Millennium software is already installed in more than 9,000 hospitals, pharmacies and doctors’ offices. And a new federal push for records automation will only increase that footprint.
Paper records can be easily lost, stolen, misplaced, or destroyed in a fire. That doesn’t benefit the doctor or the insurance company – and certainly not the patient.
The whole world is going digital and the healthcare sector has lagged behind for too long. Digital medical records are safer, better organized, more accessible and less susceptible to human error. Whenever I see an opportunity this big, I know huge profits are just around the corner.
$4-Trillion Influx
Cerner is just one of many healthcare stocks that promise huge capital gains in the weeks and months ahead. And my colleague Marc Lichtenfeld, Editor of FirstLine Investor Alert, has uncovered dozens more.
FirstLine aims to profit from the $4 trillion that’s going to flood the healthcare sector over the coming years. Thanks to nearly four million Baby Boomers turning 65 every year, companies involved in biotech, genomics, regenerative medicine, medical technology and personalized medicine will soon experience explosive growth.
In a recent chat with Marc, he told me about four companies in particular that have huge upside potential right now.
The first is a firm poised to take advantage of the frenzy in the hepatitis C space. Investors have seen buyout premiums of 89% and 163% in the past two months. Plus, in April, the company is expected to have the first drug approved that addresses the cause of a very serious disease, rather than just the symptoms.
The second is an emerging leader in regenerative medicine. In early clinical trials, its treatments produce dramatic improvements in patients with chronic heart disease. If approved, this procedure would both save both lives and millions of healthcare dollars.
The third is a small firm with a drug that nearly doubles the survival of patients with an aggressive cancer, with few side effects.
The last – and potentially the biggest opportunity – is a company that reads the DNA of cancer tumors. This helps doctors determine the proper course of treatment, allowing the patient to avoid chemotherapy.
Look Beyond Negative Headlines
I can’t emphasize strongly enough how important it is for investors today to look beyond all the negative political and economic headlines and focus on companies that are set to knock the ball out of the park for shareholders.
When Willie Sutton was asked why he robbed banks, he answered simply, “Because that’s where the money is.” For the very same reason, you should invest in the fastest growing companies in the healthcare sector today.
Good Investing,
Alexander Green
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Does Low Volatility Put Your Portfolio At Risk?
Posted on January 28th, 2012 No commentsDoes Low Volatility Put Your Portfolio At Risk?
by Alexander Green, Investment U Chief Investment Strategist
Friday, January 27, 2012: Issue #1695The stock market gyrated so wildly in 2011 that many investors finally threw in the towel.
How else can we read the massive equity fund redemptions that occurred in the second half of last year?
But, apparently, the market has taken its anti-anxiety medication. After last year’s gut-wrenching swings, U.S. stocks have been surprisingly tranquil. For 13 straight days, the Dow has moved up or down less than 100 points.
This is good news for bullish traders and bad news for those who have been making money trading the VIX. Let me explain…
The VIX is the ticker symbol for the CBOE Market Volatility Index, a popular measure of volatility in S&P 500 index options. According to The Wall Street Journal, this so-called “fear gauge” has fallen 20% to levels unseen in six months.
Why? One reason is that the U.S. economy appears to be getting back on its feet. Despite all the pessimism in the Eurozone, U.S. corporations are busy reporting yet another quarter of all-time record profits. (Just how long will mom-and-pop investors ignore this salient point?)
The Dow is up almost 500 points for the month. Fund companies report that money is flowing back into equities again. Yet the calm makes some investors nervous. I hear many analysts crying out that the market is about to plunge again.
Deluded, Ignorant, or Both
Let’s start with the straightforward declaration that anyone who claims to know “what the market is going to do next” is, by definition, someone who is ignorant, deluded, or both. The market will rise or fall next week or next month based on next week’s or next month’s news. Yesterday’s news has already been discounted. (As Legg Mason’s Bill Miller likes to say, “If it’s in the papers, in the price.)
Moreover, there’s no historical evidence to show that a market pause generally precedes a correction. And the data go back pretty far.
For example, market analyst Mark Hulbert has loaded the Dow’s daily returns – all the way back to its creation in 1896 – into his statistical software. For each trade date since, he calculated the Dow’s trailing volatility and then looked to see if the stock market performed any different following periods of low volatility than it did at all other times.
The short answer? Nope. He came up empty. Perhaps that’s the reason for the old Wall Street saw: “Never sell a dull market short.”
There are two things to conclude here:
- The hair-raising volatility that made trading (going long) the VIX like taking a tootsie roll from a toddler is over, at least for now…
- The other important takeaway is that traders and investors have no historical reason to believe that the recent pause portends a market downturn ahead.
Sure, a spike in oil prices, a hedge fund blow-up or a nasty surprise from across the pond could change that in a nanosecond. But bolts out of the blue are just one of the many short-term hazards of trading and investing.
For now, the market is taking a breather. But that doesn’t mean it isn’t about to get a second wind.
Good Investing,
Alexander Green