Yes, you are
welcome to republish these articles in their original form, with
appropriate author credits. I'd be interested in knowing where and when,
but it is not a requirement.
(Tell a friend about these articles!)
The Investor's Creed & Your Investment
Portfolio
(October, 2007)
Summary:
"The
"shock" market is the adult version of childhood thrill rides, but with
no predictable beginning or end, and no way of gauging the size or
duration of the peaks and valleys. This is one of the very few things
that can actually be known about The Market, security groups, and
sectors.
"
The Dow, Your Portfolio,
and Aliens
(October, 2007)
Summary: "When
investors start to question why their Municipal Bond portfolios are
trailing the gain in the Dow, or when retirees start to buy gold bullion
instead of groceries, something is wrong. And it's the same ole stuff
that produces the greed and fear that lead to
investment-program-destroying mistakes every time! So lets look at the
performance of the Dow, to gain some perspective.
"
Commissions, Commissions, Commissions
(August, 2007)
Summary:
"In investing, fixed costs are minimal
unless you go out of your way to increase them by adopting some form of
flat fee, commission-replacement arrangement. A management person
responsible for directing your portfolio is a fixed expense; commissions
were meant to be variable. .Think about it this way. The major Full
Service firms on Wall Street charge backbreaking, obscene, commissions
and they stay in the retail business. Would they allow clients with as
little as $100,000 to opt for a Flat Fee arrangement if they thought
that they would make less money?"
ETFs Bring Down the Mighty DOW!
(August, 2007)
Summary:
"So, in addition to the normal risks
associated with investing in general, we add: speculating in narrowly
focused sectors, guessing on the prospects of unproven small cap
companies, experimenting with securities in single countries, rolling
the dice on commodities, and hoping for the eventual success of new
technologies.
"
How Do You Spell Correction?
(August, 2007)
Summary:
"Repetition is good
for the brain's CPU, so forgive me for reinforcing what I've said in the
face of every correction since 1979... if you don't love corrections,
you really don't understand the financial markets. Don't be insulted, it
seems as though very few financial professionals want you to see it this
way and, in fact, Institutional Wall Street loves it when individual
investors panic in the face of uncertainty."
Stock and Bond Trading as a Conservative Investment Strategy
(May, 2007)
Summary: "Trading
does not have to be done quickly to be productive, and it doesn't have
to focus on higher risk securities to be profitable. And perhaps most
importantly, it doesn't have to avoid the interest rate sensitive income
securities that are so important to the long-term success of any true
investment portfolio.
...no
more calls of your highest yielding paper when interest rates fall.
Instead, you are taking capital gains, compounding your yield Of
course its magic… that's what we do here on Wall Street!
"
An Investor's Eye View of the Corporate
Income Tax
(April, 2007)
Summary: "Politicians
have neither been shy about dictating "proper" behavior to individuals
nor hesitant in shamelessly picking the pockets of businesses.
At the root of the problem
is the tremendous investment the major parties have in nurturing
divisiveness, jealousy, and misunderstanding in the
electorate. The
Corporate Income Tax is a non-productive weight on business decision
makers, causing expenditures that would not be considered were they not
tax deductible."
Investment Politics 2008: What's (left) In Your Wallet?
(April, 2007)
Summary: "As Investors, we represent the single biggest voter
block in the country. We must respond in one voice to the endless
political drivel with a resounding "Money Talks, BS Walks". We want
decision makers who design laws that aid economic freedoms, not
lawmakers who make decisions that restrict them. Here's the MT~BSW
"Financial Plan" for the 2008 Election. Dot Connectors Wanted!"
March
Investment Madness: The Financial Final Four
(March, 2007)
Summary: "What correlation could there possibly be
between an Annual Round Ball Tournament and an Investment Portfolio or
its Management? The Final Four is
comprised of the best teams, not necessarily the best players. If the
legendary Greek was handicapping portfolio management teams, he
would be smiling broadly and rubbing his hands together in anticipation
of making odds in the Financial Markets! How cool is this, a game with
no end."
Dealing With Stock Market Corrections
(March, 2007)
Summary: "A correction
is a beautiful thing, simply the flip side of a rally, big or small.
Theoretically, even technically I'm told, corrections adjust equity
prices to their actual value or "support levels". So if you over think
the environment or over cook the research, you'll miss the party. Unlike
many things in life, Stock Market realities need to be dealt with
quickly, decisively, and with zero hindsight."
Year End Investment and Tax Strategies
(November, 2006)
Summary: "First
thing Monday morning I'm going to march into my boss's office and demand
a pay cut so that I'll be in a lower tax bracket. The key issue in
considering a capital loss is the economic viability of the investment…
not your tax situation! Surely, speaketh the Conventional Wisdom
prophets, these profits will hang around until next year, thus deferring
those terrible taxes! (Worked real well at year-end '99, you'll
recall.)"
Investment Scandals & Scams: What's Next
(October, 2006)
Summary: "Plain
vanilla fraud and theft are less worrisome to me than situations where
the general acceptance of misinformation or "business as usual"
practices allows inherently bad product ideas and blatant mismanagement
to become accepted by regulatory authorities, financial professionals,
and myopically gullible consumers. Here are some candidates for future
"Blockbuster Scandal Awards" (B S Awards, if you will):"
John Stossel for President:
Two (unrelated) Book Reviews
(September, 2006)
Summary: "As
totally different as these books are in size, subject matter, and
writing style, they brought me around to the same periphery broadening
conclusions. As investors, we are perhaps the largest single
non-partisan constituency in America whether self-employed, employed by
others or retired."
Investment Management Strategy: Seven Principles for Success
(September, 2006)
Summary: "Establish a profit-taking target
for every security you purchase. Avoid Unrealized Gains, Embrace
Volatility, Increase Annual Income, and remember that all key investment
moments are only visible in rear view mirrors. Keep in mind that you
need Income to pay the bills, and examine Market Value numbers at
intelligent intervals."
Solving
Social Security: Fire the Politicians!
(August, 2006)
Summary: "Are you
surprised that there is no "Social Security Trust Fund"… no investments
and no Investment Managers. This is a gigantic Government designed and
controlled Ponzi scheme that has worked incredibly well in spite of
congressional tinkering and prohibitively high cost. There was always a
tax plan for funding the benefits, but never an Investment Plan.
"
Real
Estate Investing: No Lawyers, No Debt, No Plungers
(August, 2006)
Summary: "Real
Estate investing is not nearly as legally complicated, financially
burdensome, or time consuming as you might think. The benefits of this
form of Real Estate Investing vs. ownership of the properties themselves
should be clear: No attorneys; no debt; no maintenance; no problem."
Stock Market Window Dressing: The Art of
Looking Smart!
(July, 2006)
Summary: "At least four times per year, security
prices are more a function of institutional marketing practices than
they are a reflection of the economic forces that (we would like to
think) are their primary determining factors. Do you remember the
"Circle of Gold" chain letter from the seventies?"
RELAX, A
Volatile Stock Market Is Your Dearest Friend
(June, 2006)
Summary: "Call it foresight, or hindsight if you
want to be argumentative, but a long-term view of the Investment Process
eliminates the guesswork and points pretty clearly toward a trading
mentality that keys on the very natural volatility of the hundreds of
Investment Grade Equities out there for your portfolio building
attention."
In Value
Stock Investing, Quality is Job One
(June, 2006)
Summary:
"How do we create a confidence building Stock Selection Universe? Simply
operating on blind faith with one of the common definitions may be too
simplistic, particularly since many of the numbers originate from the
subject companies".
The Dow Jones Industrial Average: Failing the
Average Investor
(May, 2006)
Summary: "To most investors, the DJIA provides all of the information
they think they need, and they worship it mindlessly, thinking that this
time tattered average has mystical predictive and analytic powers far
beyond the scope of any other market number. It's Wall Street's
rendition of 'The Emperor's New Clothes'."
Ten Common Investment Errors: Stocks, Bonds, &
Management
(April, 2006)
Summary: "Losing money on an
investment may not be the result of a mistake, and not all mistakes
result in monetary losses. Compounding the problems that investors have
managing their investment portfolios is the sideshowesque sensationalism
that the media brings to the process. Avoid these ten common errors to
improve your performance:"
An Investor's View
of The Fair Tax: A Resolution
(March,
2006)
Summary:
"A Government that bemoans the population's low savings and investment
rates has only itself to blame. The majority of Americans would agree
that investing, retirement planning, and estate preservation would be
easier to manage if the Internal Revenue Code was comprehensible. A
landslide of American voters would elect any candidate championing IRC
replacement surgery."
Investment Strategy: The Investor's Creed
(March, 2006)
Summary: "The Stock Market is a
dynamic place where investors can consistently make reasonable returns
on their capital if they comply with the basic principles of the
endeavor AND if they don't measure their progress too frequently with
irrelevant measuring devices. Five simple concepts of Asset Allocation,
Investment Strategy, and Psychology are summed up quite nicely in the
'The Investor's Creed'."
A New Wall Street Line Dance: Performance
(December, 2005)
Summary: "Every December, with visions of sugarplums dancing in their
heads, investors begin to scrutinize their performance, formulate
coulda’s and shoulda’s, and determine what to try next year. It’s an
annual, masochistic, rite of passage."
Managing the Income Portfolio
(December, 2005)
Summary: "You don’t have to be a
professional Investment Manager to professionally manage your investment
portfolio, but you do need to have a long term plan and know something
about Asset Allocation. Controlling, or Implementing, the Investment
Plan will be accomplished best by those who are least emotional, most
decisive, naturally calm, patient, generally conservative (not
politically), and self actualized."
Income Investing: Selecting the Right Stuff
(November, 2005)
Summary: "When is 3 percent better
than 6 percent? Yeah, we all know the answer, but only until the prices
of the securities we already own begin to fall. Then, logic and
mathematical acumen disappear and we become susceptible to all kinds of
special cures for the periodic onset of higher interest rates. Higher
Interest Rates are good for investors, even better than lower rates."
Déjà Vu, All Over Again (and again…)
(October, 2005)
Summary: "Market Corrections can be good for the wallet! Corrections are
part of the normal "shock market" menu, and can be brought about by
either bad news or good news. If you don’t love corrections (and deal
with them like visiting relatives) you really don’t understand the
financial markets. Don’t be insulted, it seems as though very few
investors see it this way."
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