Thursday, 4 October 2012

A look at a currency table


Now, let's take a look at a currency table:

Row 1 & Column 1: Currency Name (or symbol) The currencies are exactly the same in both the column and the row. This table allows you to compare the value of a currency in relation to another. The only exception on this table is gold, which is commonly quoted in currency tables because it is considered to be an alternative currency that anyone can purchase.

If you are reading this table the values are in the following context:

$1 in currency of row #1, is worth $___ in column #1 dollars.

For example, 1 euro is worth $1.3926 in Canadian dollars. If you were in Canada and you wanted to exchange your 1 euro for Canadian dollars, you would get $1.3926 in return. On the other side of the equation, if you had $1 Canadian and you wanted to convert it to euros, you would get 0.7181 in return. Both of these numbers are circled in red on the table.
It is also important to note that 1/1.3926 = 0.7181. If you only have the currency rate for one direction, then all you need to do is divide one by that number to find the value in the other country's currency.


Read more: http://www.investopedia.com/university/tables/tables5.asp#ixzz28JIVJCza

A look at the mutual fund table


Take a look at the mutual fund table below:

Columns 1 & 2: 52-Week High and Low. These are the mutual fund's highest and lowest over the previous 52 weeks (1 year). This typically does not include the previous day's price.

Column 3: Fund Name. This column lists the name of the mutual fund. The company that manages the fund is written above the column in bold type.

Column 4: Fund Specifics. Different letters and symbols have various meanings. For example, a "*" means the fund is retirement account eligible, "N" means no load, "F" is front-end load, and "B" means the fund has both front and back-end fees. For other symbols, see the legend that accompanies the financial tables in your newspaper.

Column 5: Dollar Change. The dollar change in the price of the mutual fund from the previous day's trading.

Column 6: % Change. The percentage change in the price of the mutual fund from the previous day's trading.
Column 7: Week High. The highest price at which the fund traded during the past week.

Column 8: Week Low. The lowest price at which the fund traded during the past week.

Column 9: Close. The last price at which the fund traded.

Column 10: Week's Dollar Change. The dollar change in the price of the mutual fund from the previous week.

Column 11: Week's % Change. The percentage change in the price of the mutual fund from the previous week. 


Read more: http://www.investopedia.com/university/tables/tables4.asp#ixzz28JHnCUuf

A look at the bond table

Let's take a look at the bond table, and see how to break it down. 


Column 1: Issuer. This is the company, state, province or country that is issuing the bond

Column 2: Coupon. The coupon refers to the fixed interest rate that the issuer pays to the lender. The coupon rate varies by bond. 

Column 3: Maturity Date. This is the date when the borrower will pay the principal back to the lenders (investors). Typically, only the last two digits of the year are quoted, so 25 means 2025, 04 is 2004, etc. 

Column 4: Bid Price. This is the price that someone is willing to pay for the bond. It is quoted in relation to 100, regardless of the par value. Think of the bond price as a percentage, a bond with a bid of $93 means it is trading at 93% of its par value. 

Column 5: Yield. The yield indicates the annual return until the bond matures. Yield is calculated by the amount of interest paid on a bond divided by the price -- it is a measure of the income generated by a bond. If the bond is callable it will have a "c" followed by the year in which the bond can be called. For example, c10 means the bond can be called as early as 2010. 

Read more: http://www.investopedia.com/university/tables/tables3.asp#ixzz28JH2UqLJ

A look at the Options table


Let's take a look at the Options table:

Column 1: Strike Price. This is the stated price per share for which underlying stock may be purchased (for a call) or sold (for a put) by the option holder upon exercise of the option contract. When you exercise a call option, this is the value for which you purchase the shares. Option strike prices typically move in increments of $2.50 or $5. In the example above, the strike price moves in $2 increments.

Column 2: Expiry Date. This shows the end of the life of an options contract. Options expire on the third Friday of the expiry month.

Column 3: Call or Put. This column refers to whether the option is a call or a put. A call is the option to purchase, whereas a put is the option to sell.

Column 4: Volume. This indicates the total number of options contracts traded for the day. The total volume of all contracts is listed at the bottom of each table.
Column 5: Bid. The price someone is willing to pay for the options contract. To get the cost of one contract you need to multiply the price by 100.

Column 6: Ask. The price for which someone is willing to sell an options contract. To get the cost of one contract you need to multiply the price by 100.

Column 7: Open InterestOpen interest is the number of options contracts that are open. These are contracts that have not expired or have not been exercised.


Read more: http://www.investopedia.com/university/tables/tables6.asp#ixzz28JFzYsK6

Morgan Stanley’s Best Stocks for Long-Term Growth

Laura Joszt

Published: Monday, October 1st 2012




Although stock picking is incredibly inaccurate and often wrong, that doesn’t stop analysts from predicting which stocks they think will do the best. Given the state of the world, Morgan Stanley has come up with its list of stocks that do well no matter how the economy is doing.

Europe is still fighting off a debt crisis, China’s economy is finally slowing down and the U.S. is facing a scary fiscal cliff at the end of 2012 (in addition to the end of the world?). Plus, investors seem to be scared of stocks again. And the truth is no one can really predict where the economies of the world are going — although they will try their hardest to come up with accurate indicators.

Business Insider has posted the 42 stocks on Morgan Stanley’s list that should help investors in this uncertain environment. These companies benefit from strong long-term growth prospects, so don’t expect to make a quick buck and get out like other stocks.

Here are the companies on the list with the highest earnings per share (EPS) growth.

Note: The EPS growth is the projected compound annual growth rate (CAGR) from 2011 to 2014; the P/E estimates are based on 2012 EPS expectations; and the PEG ratio refers to the price earnings to growth ratio, which is an indicator of the stock's valuation.

Stock information and estimates are from Morgan Stanley.

10. Lululemon Athletica


Ticker: LULU
EPS growth: 29.9%
P/E 2012: 40.0
PEG ratio: 1.3

9. American Tower


Ticker: AMT
EPS growth: 34.3%
P/E 2012: 50.1
PEG ratio: 1.5

8. Apple

Ticker: AAPL
EPS growth: 34.4%
P/E 2012: 15.4
PEG ratio: 0.4
7. Under Armour


Ticker: UA
EPS growth: 34.5%
P/E 2012: 45.1
PEG ratio: 1.3
6. Rackspace Hosting Inc.


Ticker: RAX
EPS growth: 35.3%
P/E 2012: 87.0
PEG ratio: 2.5

5. Michael Kors Holdings


Ticker: KORS
EPS growth: 40.0%
P/E 2012: 37.2
PEG ratio: 0.9

4. (tie) Fusion-io


Ticker: FIO
EPS growth: 43.8%
P/E 2012: 83.6
PEG ratio: 1.9

4. (tie) Amazon


Ticker: AMZN
EPS growth: 43.8%
P/E 2012: 327.9
PEG ratio: 7.5
2. Crown Castle


Ticker: CCI
EPS growth: 50.1%
P/E 2012: 67.6
PEG ratio: 1.3
1. Linkedin Corp


Ticker: LNKD
EPS growth: 89.9%
P/E 2012: 214.1
PEG ratio: 2.4

The information contained in this article should not be construed as investment advice or as a solicitation to buy or sell any stock.

Read more:
Morgan Stanley: These 42 Stocks are Winners No Matter What Happens in the Economy – Business Insider

Wednesday, 3 October 2012

How the rich get richer and you can, too


By Mitch Tuchman
We all know, innately, how the rich get richer. Money begets money. But how does that actually happen, aside from compounding interest and purely financial factors?
You could take the cynic's view that the game is rigged. But the more accurate answer, backed by research, is that the rich get richer because of great parenting. How rich you become over your lifetime is directly related to how early you capture the basic truths of finance and investing.
You have seen the exception that proves the rule, the rich kid who blows his family's wealth in a generation through poor decisions. Chalk that up to absentee parents. Truly, teaching is the missing link.
In a paper unveiled a few months ago, researchers led by Annamaria Lusardi, professor of economics at George Washington University, found that an early understanding of financial concepts accounts for as much as half of the wealth gap between the affluent and those with low incomes . Lusardi also found an exponential effect: Those who acquire financial understanding early tend to accumulate assets faster and those with more assets tend to keep learning about personal finance because they have more at stake. (Emphasis added)
There are two powerful forces at work here, in terms of how the rich get richer. Let's tease them out so that you can benefit from the knowledge.
First and foremost, how the rich get richer has a lot to do with picking the right parents. Kidding aside, being born into a developed-country household, availing yourself of a quality education at a low relative cost, enjoying the benefits of a healthy diet and a safe childhood, all of these things give a person automatic advantages.
Yet there are people born into good circumstances who nevertheless seem to just "get by." They see the rich get richer and, quite rightly, question their own choices.
Instead, they should question, or at least examine, their parents' choices. Kids don't listen to what their parents say. They do what their parents do. A parent who saves diligently and consumes moderately is setting a very good, lifelong example for his or her children. A parent who constantly overspends and lives in debt does not.

How the rich get richer: They start early

But the kicker here is learning by doing: Teaching by example is great, but a child learns the power of saving and investing not only by seeing it done by others but by doing it themselves. Practice is how the rich get richer.
Once a young person gets a little bit of capital set aside, they begin to think more conservatively about money: How can I protect and grow that wealth? What are the risks to my plan?
How the rich get richer is by passing on simple lessons about compound interest, about risk and reward, and about the role of money in a healthy, happy life. Rich parents don't fear money; they consider it a useful tool. Those attitudes pass on, compounding in value with each succeeding generation.
Working hard at getting an education is a great base. The simple act of periodic, automatic saving is another excellent lesson. Prudent, effective investing is yet another.

Can Drive-Through Grocery Shopping Save Tesco?

Bloomberg's Tom Gibson on how Tesco is trying to win back customers with their `click-and-collect' service.

Tesco Seen to Regain Market Share Through 2013



Oct. 3 (Bloomberg) -- Bryan Roberts, an analyst at Kantar Retail, talks about competition between U.K. retailers Tesco Plc and J Sainsbury Plc. He speaks with Francine Lacqua on Bloomberg Television's "On the Move." (Source: Bloomberg)

Tesco Reports First Profit Decline in Almost Two Decades


By Sarah Shannon - Oct 3, 2012 3:20 PM GMT+0800

So-called trading profit, a measure that excludes property gains, fell 11 percent to 1.59 billion pounds ($2.6 billion) in the six months ended Aug. 25, the Cheshunt, England-based retailer said in a statement today. The average estimate of 12 analysts compiled by Bloomberg was 1.62 billion pounds.
Chief Executive Officer Philip Clarke has pledged to invest 1 billion pounds in new products, additional staffing and Tesco’s 2,900 U.K. stores as he seeks to boost a leading market position that fell to a seven-year low earlier this year. Same- store sales rose in the second quarter, snapping a run of six straight quarterly declines.
“The last couple of years have shown us that even the giants can falter when they take their eye off the shopper,” said Bryan Roberts, an analyst at Kantar Retail in London. Still, the second-quarter sales performance “tell us that its underperformance in the U.K. may well have bottomed out.”
Tesco fell as much as 2.1 percent in London trading and was down 1.7 percent at 331 pence as of 8:06 a.m. The shares have fallen 18 percent this year, while those of competitor J Sainsbury Plc have gained 14 percent.

Sainsbury Sales

Sainsbury said today that U.K. same-store sales growth accelerated to 1.9 percent in the second quarter on a basis that excludes gasoline as it stepped up price competition with Tesco.
Tesco’s same-store sales rose 0.1 percent in the most recent quarter, excluding fuel and value-added tax, the first increase since the third quarter of the 2011 financial year.
“The changes are coming through at a pace,'' Clarke said on a conference call. ''Customers are starting to tell us they like what they’re seeing. I wouldn’t be saying we’ve turned the corner, we’re on the road.”
The CEO said the external environment “continues to present challenges all over the world.”
In South Korea, Tesco’s second-largest market after the U.K., profit was hurt by restrictions to store opening hours. Business in European countries including Poland, the Czech Republic and Hungary was affected by the debt crisis and falling consumer sentiment. The retailer gets about a third of sales and earnings from outside of the U.K.
Tesco maintained the first-half dividend at 4.63 pence, the first time this century that it hasn’t raised the payout.

Tuesday, 2 October 2012

10 rules for multiplying personal wealth


http://business.rediff.com/report/2009/jul/09/perfin-10-rules-for-multiplying-personal-wealth.htm



I have the privilege of teaching financial planning courses at local colleges and adult learning centers.


One of the things we do in class is recite and write down a set of rules I hope each student can learn to live by.


Here are a few key rules to remember:
Rule 1: Be systematic, unemotional and diversified
This is the very first rule we touch on right from the beginning. There's a popular bumper sticker that says, "I'm spending my grandkids' inheritance."
That whole idea just frustrates me. In some ways, our society's personality is such that if we can spend our money before we die, we've lived a great life. But you can't do that.
Rule 2: Never spend principal
That's the second rule. Inflation has gone above 10 per cent in the US economy five times, and I'd bet you it will happen again.
Rule 3: Never borrow money to buy a depreciating asset
Almost everybody does this at some point. But as soon as possible, and definitely by retirement, you have to get back to a cash basis.
How many people know what a $30,000 car bought on credit costs them at age 25? In retirement dollars, at age 65 and assuming a hypothetical 10 per cent return, that financed car could cost as much as $11,314 a month in potential income. Forever!
So, do you or your children understand what an "investment" in a car really costs you? Yes, I know we all buy cars. But try to imagine what would happen if I got every 25-year-old to forgo just one car purchase and invest that same amount of money in their long-term retirement goals. What a huge difference that could make to their choices at retirement!
Rule 4: Never save money in a spending account
Keep separate bank accounts for saving and spending. You have to save in savings accounts. If you truly want those savings to grow, use an account that helps you leave the money at work, rather than a "slush fund" that's easy to dip into.
People tell me they are saving $545 a month in an account. Yet when I ask them how much they have accumulated after seven years of doing this, their answer is often $1,123 because they spend out of that same account.
It is not a save-to-save account -- it's a save-to-spend account! If you know you're not naturally a disciplined saver, make it harder to get at the money. You'll be doing yourself a favor in the long run.
Rule 5: Use half, save half
Every time you pay off a debt, get a pay raise, get a bonus, or have any excess cash, have fun with half the money, and put the other half toward your long-term goals.
This is one of the best rules, especially for younger people. By following this rule consistently, in ten years, most people are amazed at how much they can save.
Whether you save or not has nothing to do with how much money you make. Either you save or you don't. It's a habit. Make a habit of investing half of any windfall, big or small, right off the top.
Rule 6: Always use matching money
For example, your employer's 401(k) matching program (in India [ Images ], the employer's matching Providend Fund Contribution, for example).
Do whatever you must to take advantage of matched contributions in a retirement plan. You can't afford not to take the free money.
Hypothetically speaking, if you invest $100 take-home pay in a taxable investment (25 per cent tax on growth) at an assumed 10 per cent return, you would potentially have $135,586 in 30 years (sales charges and fees not included).
If you put the same $100 into your 401(k) that is 100 per cent matched, now you have $150 a month saved because of the tax savings.
Meanwhile your boss adds $150 because of the match -- and it grows tax-deferred, too! Using the same hypothetical return scenario, we have $683,797 to live on -- five times as much wealth with the same work.
Sometimes being smart with our money is a phenomenal advantage. This is a classic example of where investor behavior, not investment performance, makes a huge difference in your long-term wealth potential. You can hate your boss, or plan to quit, but you must take advantage of the matched money.
Rule 7: Do not spend more than you make
This should seem painfully obvious, but people often have no idea how much they're really spending and what relationship that has to how much they make.
In making a budget people often cannot account for 30 per cent of the money they earn and where it goes.
If you are just a little more vigilant, you can significantly enhance your long-term ability to reach your goals.
A budget doesn't happen by accident; it takes practice and is an ever-changing tool in our financial planning. Practice makes perfect. Although "perfect" is never the ideal word for a budget, it does have more meaning and usefulness the longer we practice its use.
Rule 8: Never leave undivided real property to joint beneficiaries
Lots of things are more important than money. Family is probably at the top of the list. If you want a vicious family feud on your hands, breaking this rule would be a great place to start.
Imagine a farm that gets left to four sons: One has farmed it for 20 years; one is an environmentalist and wants it to be a park; one is broke and needs money; and one could not care less about it. Who will get wealthy from this plan? The attorneys. And the kids and grandkids will probably hate each other forever.
Remember that 'equal', 'equitable', and 'fair' are three different words with three totally different meanings.
Rule 9: Never name co-trustees or co-executors of your estate
This one goes right along with the undivided property rule above. Next to poor planning, litigation can be the biggest financial drain on an estate.
Minimize the number of trusted decision-makers, and you'll reduce your chances for litigation. What's more, the entire process will be easier and more efficient with one decision-maker.
Rule 10: Above all --
--Be happy with what you have, and it will lead to both unbelievable financial success and personal (not mere financial) wealth!
[Excerpt from The Invincible Investor: 10 Top Financial Planners Reveal the Secrets of Loss-Proof Investing(www.visionbooksindia.com/details.asp?isbn=8170947456) Published by Vision Books.]