Friday, 2 January 2009

Teach Your Children the Value of Money

Teach Your Children the Value of Money

There are a number of ways you can teach your children to form healthy savings habits. This article offers some age-specific teaching tools.


Your Child Could Become a Millionaire

This chart shows the growth, compounded at 8% monthly, of an investment of $100 per month beginning at age 4 and ending at age 18, assuming that the investment remains untouched until age 62. This example is hypothetical and does not represent the performance of any actual investment.


Summary


  • The benefits of teaching your children about money can be both short and long term. Let your children help you determine how to teach them. Use their questions to develop lessons.

  • Explain to children that money is earned. Consider paying them for helping with certain chores.

  • Use a piggy bank to help teach about savings and interest. Set a savings goal to encourage your children to save some of their allowance. Calculate how much is saved each month and chip in a certain percentage as interest.

  • Take your children to the bank to open a savings account requiring a lower minimum deposit.

  • If you extend credit, issue an IOU, set a repayment schedule, and charge interest.

  • Review compounding, or the ability of interest to build upon itself.

  • Once your children begin earning their own money through part-time jobs, introduce them to investments such as stocks and mutual funds.

Checklist


  • If they're old enough, help your children set up a plan to save for their own goals (such as a new video game) and other accounts for family goals (such as paying for college).

  • Agree on an amount of their savings that you'll "match."

  • Schedule time to talk about how investing works and how it may enable people to reach their financial goals faster.

  • Talk to your children about good shopping habits. Perhaps you can ask them to clip coupons and let them keep some of the savings.


Source: Teaching Your Children the Value of Money


Topics
Teach Your Children the Value of Money
Earlier Is Better
Where Does Money Come From?
Children and Allowances
Make Saving Interesting
Banking and Investing
Compounding
A Little Learning Can Pay Off

The Year 2008 of the Great Financial Meltdown




Small house versus big house strategy

Homes: Why Buying Bigger Is No Guarantee of a Rich Retirement
by Jonathan ClementsWednesday, December 20, 2006


This is one tab the house won't pick up. It's among today's most popular retirement-savings strategies: Buy the big house, hope the real-estate boom continues and then trade down at retirement, thus freeing up home equity that will pay for years of early-bird specials. Sound appealing? Trouble is, you will fork over a heap of dollars -- and you'll end up with a surprisingly small nest egg.

To understand why, imagine you are age 35, have a $400,000 home with a $300,000 mortgage and are looking to retire at age 65. What's the best way to build yourself a nest egg?
You might stick with your current home, pay down that mortgage over the next 30 years and stash your spare cash in stock and bond mutual funds. Call this the "small-house strategy" (though, in many parts of the country, a $400,000 home wouldn't be exactly small).
Alternatively, you could opt for the "big-house strategy" -- trading up to a $1 million home and aiming to pay down the resulting $900,000 mortgage between now and retirement. At age 65, you would then cash in a big chunk of your home equity by swapping back to the equivalent of a $400,000 home.

Which strategy would leave you richer?

Read here:

Result:
The small-house strategy would give you not double the spending money, but triple.
"The killer is the expenses on the big house," Mr. Farrell says. "It's costing you a lot to carry this $1 million investment. That money is just going out the window, while the small-house guy is investing the money."
There is, however, an upside to buying the bigger home. For the next 30 years, you would live in a grander place. But that just highlights what this is all about. Buying a bigger house isn't an investment. Rather, it is a lifestyle choice -- and it comes with a brutally large price tag.


-----

MONEY PIT
Buying, selling and owning real estate isn't cheap.

• Baby-boomer homeowners spent an average of $2,200 on home improvements in 2003.
• On a $200,000 mortgage, closing costs will typically cost you around $3,000.
• In 2004, home sellers paid real-estate brokers an average of 5.1% in commissions.

Sources: Bankrate.com; Harvard's Joint Center for Housing Studies; REAL Trends

Buy Instead of Renting When You Have the Down Payment

Buy Instead of Renting When You Have the Down Payment
Friday, September 30, 2005

After looking at all the costs involved in buying house, you may have begun to have second thoughts: Perhaps, it is better to rent a home.
Real estate in most areas today is not a top investment compared with investment securities. "You're not going to get a 30 percent return on your house," said Steve O'Connor, senior director of residential finance at the Mortgage Bankers Association of America. In the past decade, people have been advised to think of a home "as shelter not investment" O'Connor said. "Wealth accumulation is secondary."
Still, as shelter, most experts say if you can afford the down payment, it makes sense to buy your home rather than rent it. That's because you can deduct mortgage interest on income tax and build equity in your property. This is especially true when mortgage interest rates are low. Mortgage interest rates are deductible up to a $100,000 annual limit.

Example
A homeowner has a gross annual income of $40,000. The monthly mortgage payment is $1,000 on a 30-year mortgage. In the first few years, 80 percent of that payment goes to interest and is therefore tax deductible. In the 15 percent tax bracket, the homeowner saved about $375 more in taxes with the home provision versus with only a standard deduction.

-----

Lease-Purchase Agreements

Some people take a middle road. They ease into homeownership by renting a house or condominium with an option to buy.

• Lease-purchase gives a buyer time to save for a down payment or to clean up a credit history.
• It can work in a buyer's favor in areas where real estate values are rising quickly at a rate of 10 percent a year. A buyer benefits from this appreciation because the purchase price of the home is locked in on the day the buyer signed the rent-to-own contract with the seller.
• In most agreements, the seller allows a portion of the rent to be applied towards the purchase price, which some lenders consider to be part of the down payment. The amount of rent credited could be 10 percent to 100 percent, based on your contract.
• Most rent-to-own options require some down payment to secure the agreement, which is not refundable in case the renter decides not to buy.

Homeowners who would agree to a lease-purchase option include people who have had property on the market longer than they wish or owners who had to move and want the house to be lived in. The owner benefits with rental income to help pay the carrying costs of the home, and the strong possibility of selling the house when the contract expires.

Copyrighted, Bankrate.com. All rights reserved.

http://finance.yahoo.com/real-estate/articleindex
http://finance.yahoo.com/real-estate/article/101345/Buy_Don't_Rent_When_You_Can_Afford_the_Down_Payment

Exit Strategies for Entrepreneurs

Summary
  • The sale of a business is only one small transaction at the center of a larger plan often referred to as an exit strategy.
  • The most successful exit strategies are those that give the business owners the greatest probability of comfort with the results as seen in their financial security, family dynamics and long-range goals.
  • There are many options for structuring the sale of the business, and each had different implications for other elements of the broader strategy. Buy-sell agreements can help maintain continuity for remaining owners in a wide range of circumstances. Pure cash transactions typically yield the greatest immediate liquidity. Leveraged transactions may enable managers, partners or family to take over and maintain continuity for the business. ESOPs can provide tax benefits and empower employees.
  • Trusts can be valuable tools for managing the income tax and estate planning implications of the wealth derived from a business sale.


Checklist

  • Record all exit policies and sales agreements in writing.
  • Hire an expert to identify the fair market value of your business before settling on a selling price.
  • Work with a business broker who can help simplify the job of selling your business by screening potential buyers before referring qualified candidates to you for more information.
  • Consider allowing employees to make the first offer to purchase your company.
  • Draft confidentiality agreements to be signed by anyone who takes a close look at your company's operations and records.

Source: http://finance.yahoo.com/how-to-guide/career-work/12818

Topics
Exit Strategies for Entrepreneurs
Laying the Groundwork
Potential Deal Forms to Consider
Managing the Proceeds
Professional Guidance a Must

Small-Business Financing: Debt vs. Equity

Summary


  • Since debt and equity are accounted for differently, each has a different impact on earnings, cash flow and taxes, and each also has a different effect on leverage, dilution and a host of other metrics.
  • Debt can be a loan, line of credit, bond or even an IOU -- any promise to repay borrowed amounts over a certain time with a specified interest rate and other terms.
  • When you finance with equity, you are giving up a portion of your ownership interest in -- and control of -- the company in exchange for cash.
  • While equity financing can be used for many different purposes, it is usually used for long-term general funding and not tied to specific projects or time frames.
  • The mix of debt and equity that best suits your company will depend on the type of business, its age, and a number of other factors.


DEBT-TO-CAPITAL RATIOS FOR SELECTED INDUSTRIES
Publishing 34%
Homebuilding 37%
Advertising & Marketing 37%
Lodging & Gaming 56%
General Retailing 24%
Supermarkets & Drugstores 33%
Commercial Transportation 18%
Packaged Foods 27%
Restaurants 23%
Health Care: Managed Care 20%
Movies & Home Entertainment 17%
(Source: Standard & Poor's.)

Source:
http://finance.yahoo.com/how-to-guide/career-work/12825
Topics
Small-Business Financing: Debt vs. Equity
Debt
Equity
Striking a Balance

Additional comments:

Yahoo! Finance User - Wednesday, May 28, 2008, 11:37AM ET Report Abuse
Overall: 4/5
Nice overall article. Loan terms depend on what is being pruchased. Real estate (10 to 20 yrs), equipment (3 to 7 yrs), inventory (2 to 3 yrs), etc. An SBA backed loan can help lengthen these terms which will help decrease monthly payments.

How-to Guides

How-to Guides
Most Popular
Mortgage Basics
Buying a New or Used Car
Get Out of Debt and Save
Make the Most of Your IRA
Home Refinancing Basics
Traditional vs. Roth 401(k)s
Retiring? Take Control of Your Assets
Shortcuts
Banking & Budgeting
Career & Work
College & Education
Family & Home
Insurance
Loans
Real Estate
Retirement
Taxes

Banking & Budgeting

Starting Out: Begin Funding for Your Financial Security
Why Avoid Bankruptcy?
Stop Singing Those Holiday Spending Blues
Yes, You CAN Get Out of Debt
Managing Debt and Credit
Put Savings (and Yourself) First With a Budget
How to Dig Yourself Out of Debt and Save at the Same Time
Career & Work

Managing Retirement Assets in the Event of a Layoff
An Introduction to Stock Options
Small Business Financing: Debt vs. Equity
Exit Strategies for Entrepreneurs
Changing Jobs? Don't Forget Your Retirement Savings
College & Education

Getting Your Children Involved in Saving for College
Using 529 Plans to Invest for College and Manage Wealth
Transferring Assets to a 529 Plan
Consider Prepaid Tuition Plans for College Savings
Series E and EE U.S. Savings Bonds
Federal and State College Financial Aid Programs
Section 529 Plans: Saving for College
Coverdell, Custodial, or 529: How to Choose
Planning for the Cost of Higher Education
Family & Home

Divorce and Your Finances
How to Finance Your Wedding
Vacation Value
Saving Strategies: Buying vs. Leasing a Car
Helping to Care for Aging Parents
Teaching Your Children the Value of Money
Buying a New or Used Car
Budgeting for Baby
Insurance

Health Care Options in Retirement
Why Disability Income Insurance?
Long-Term Care Insurance: Understand Your Options
The Role of Insurance in Your Financial Plan
Buying Life Insurance: What Kind and How Much
Loans

Financing a New Car
Retirement Plan Loans: Do They Make Sense for You?
Mortgage Basics: Financing the American Dream
Home Refinancing Basics
Real Estate

Your Home and Your Retirement
Remodeling Your Home
Buying Your First Home
Retirement

Use Annuities to Plan for Your Future
Frequently Asked Retirement Income Questions
Strategies for Building a Laddered Retirement Portfolio
Will Your Money Last? Risks to Retirement Income
The Phases of Retirement: Updating Your Finances for Your Changing Lifestyle
Frequently Asked Roth 401(k) Questions
Understanding 403(b) Plans
Financial Considerations for Americans Retiring Abroad
Your Retirement Checklist
Asset Allocation in the Golden Years
Your Social Security Statement Explained
Redefining Retirement in the 21st Century
Social Security and You: What Does the Future Hold?
The Roth Individual Retirement Account
Using a Rollover IRA to Consolidate Multiple Retirement Assets
Naming Beneficiaries of Insurance Policies and Retirement Plans
Retirement Account Distributions After Age 70 1/2
Choosing Your Annual Withdrawal Rate
Retirees and Financial Scams: How to Protect Yourself
Variable Annuities: Choices Abound for Today's Retiree
Choosing a Retirement Location
How Much Do You Need to Retire?
Bring Charitable Giving Into Your Estate Plan
Choosing Between Traditional and Roth 401(k)s
Retiring? Take Control of Your Assets
Maximizing Your Retirement Income
Making the Most of Your IRA
Taxes

Tax Strategies for Retirees
Withholding Income
2007 Tax Brackets
Who Must File a Return?
Itemizing Deductions
Standard Deductions
Personal Exemptions
Alternative Minimum Tax (AMT) - Part Two
Alternative Minimum Tax (AMT) - Part One
How to File an Extension
Common Tax Credits
Capital Gains
Audits and Penalties - Part Two
Tax Changes: What They Mean to You
The Alternative Minimum Tax -- Not Just for the Wealthy

Source: http://finance.yahoo.com/how-to-guide/index

Real Estate Education

Real Estate
Buy
A Home-Buying Primer
How to Find the Perfect Home
Buy, Don't Rent, When You Can Afford the Down Payment
Online Sleuthing Resources for Home Buyers
Web Can Help With Questions Your Realtor Can't Answer
Finding Your Ideal Neighborhood
Is a Bigger Lot Better When Buying a Home?
Five Ways to Beat Buyer's Remorse
A Web-Surfing Guide to Finding Discounts on Brand-New Homes
New Homes: Beware of Shoddy Construction
Forget the Mansion: Why Buying Bigger Doesn't Guarantee a Rich Retirement
Should You Buy That Home?
Seven Questions You Must Ask Before Buying a Condo
How to Avoid a Bad Co-op or Condo
The Lure of Living South of the Border
Recreational Land: Own Your Piece of Paradise
Can't Afford the Down Payment? Share the Wealth
Tips for Purchasing a House With a Pal
Best Places to Live 2007: America's Top Ten Towns
Best Places to Live 2007: Most Affordable Towns
Best Places to Live 2007: Where We'll Live Tomorrow
Best Places to Live 2007: A Look at Past Winners
Sell
Four Steps to Selling Your Home for Top Dollar
Ten Things Your Real Estate Broker Won't Tell You
Boosting Your Home's Value in a Down Market
How to Make the Most of Your Curb Appeal
Top Tips: Moving Your Home in a Bad Market
The Incentives Game: Know Your Competition
Five Reasons to Sell Your Home Yourself
Sellers Should Run From These Home Buyers
How to Overcome the Neighborhood Eyesore
Your Home Not Selling? Swap It
The Home-Sale Tax Exclusion
Selling a House Quick and Cheap
Ten Things Your Mover Won't Tell You
Let Uncle Sam Help Pay for Your Move
Rent
Renters, Fight for Your Rights!
Rent or Buy?
New Realities of the Rent vs. Buy Conundrum
Renters Insurance Can Offer a Safety Net
Got Pets, Eviction Record? Make Landlords Love You
Best and Worst Cities for Renters
How to Live Rent-Free
The Pros and Cons of Renting in Retirement
Why Homeowners Get Rich and Renters Stay Poor
Home Improvement
Which Home Improvements Pay Off -- and Which Don't?
Small Projects That Appeal to Buyers
Age-Appropriate Makeover Tips That Can Sell Your Home
Twenty Things That Can Alter Your Home's Value
How Much Is Too Much on Home Improvements?
Fixer-Uppers Can Be Dreams or Money Pits
Don't Let Repair Costs Drain Your Savings
How to Avoid Contractor Disputes, and What to Do If They Arise
How to Cope With Zoning Boards
Your Household Energy Crisis Solved
Which Backyard Features Add Value?
Medical Needs Can Help Pay for Remodeling
Tapping Friends and Family for Home Projects

Source: http://finance.yahoo.com/real-estate/articleindex

Options Education

Options Education

Basic Options Concepts
· How Options Work
· Exiting an Option Position
· Call Options
· Put Options
· Intrinsic Value and Time Value
· How to Use Options

Advanced Options Concepts
· LEAPs
· What Affects Equity Options Prices?
· Volatility
· Liquidity

Options Strategies: Bullish
· Buying Calls
· Covered Calls
· Vertical Spread
· Bull Call Spread
· Bull Put Spread

Options Strategies: Bearish
· Buying Puts
· Covered Puts
· Bear Put Spread
· Bear Call Spread


Source: http://biz.yahoo.com/opt/education.html

Learn the Basics about Investment Clubs

Learn the Basics about Investment Clubs

Overview
What is an Investment Club?Investorama.com
An Investment Club is a Great Learning ExperienceInvestorama.com Back to Top
Starting and Running a Successful Club
So You Want to Start an Investment Club?Investorama.com
Pitfalls for Your Investment Club to AvoidInvestorama.com
Running an Organized Investment Club MeetingInvestorama.com
Five Tips for Starting a Successful Investment ClubInvestorama.com
Adding New Members to Your Investment ClubInvestorama.com Back to Top
Additional Topics
Investment Clubs and the SECInvestorama.com
Investment Clubs and TaxesInvestorama.com

Source:
http://finance.yahoo.com/education/investment_clubs

Advice or a Novice Investor

Advice for a Novice Investor

Main Points:

  • Educate through reading
  • Learn through experience
  • Learn from mistakes
  • Keep mistakes small
  • Join investment clubs
  • Hire investment manager or advisor
  • Befriend a successful and experienced investor as Mentor
  • Remember always you are the boss
-----

Question: I am completely new to investing and want to know how to get started. I recently inherited quite a large sum of money and I would like to be able to live comfortably for the rest of my life. All I know about investing is that you can lose your shirt.


Answer: Well, I would say the one thing you know about investing is very accurate, so you are off to a good start! I think there are two parts to your question.
  1. First, how do you educate yourself?
  2. Second, how you set yourself up to live comfortably ever after?

To become informed, you can talk to savvy investors, you can read books and articles and watch video and live presentations. To really learn (which is not the same as merely being informed), you need experience. Try some things, and along the way you will undoubtedly make mistakes from which you can learn. The secret is to keep those mistakes small.
You can learn a lesson just as well from losing $500 as from losing $50,000. But you would be surprised how many people plunge ahead as if they couldn�t possibly make a mistake. They might spend weeks researching a new car purchase yet make an investing decision involving ten times as much money after only a few minutes.
To educate yourself, start by doing some reading. An excellent place to start is Investing for Dummies by Eric Tyson. This covers a wide range of alternatives and teaches you how to protect yourself from many of the biggest mistakes investors make. I would also call your attention to two good books by John C. Bogle: Bogle on Mutual Funds: New Perspectives for the Intelligent Investor, and Common Sense on Mutual Funds: New Imperatives for the Intelligent Investor.
Quite soon you will find that there�s an overwhelming amount of investment information available free on the Internet. Some of it is valuable and some of it is essentially uninformed opinion. Some of it is simply incorrect and masquerades as the truth. It can be hard to sort all this out.
Take a class at a local community college, but be aware that the teacher may be a broker or financial planner who is looking for clients to whom to sell commissioned products. The whole class may be subtly arranged with that objective in mind.
Consider joining the American Association of Individual Investors (http://www.aaii.org/), a non-profit organization that offers lots of educational materials. Local chapters in most large cities hold seminars on various investment topics.
Now, the second part of your question: How to live comfortably ever after. I don�t know your age or your objectives, or the amount of money you have inherited. So I can speak only in general terms.
Your question suggests to me that you are at relatively high risk to be taken advantage of: a novice investor with a lot of money. Therefore I would urge you to proceed with great caution.
At the moment you are at a fork in the road and you have to make a basic decision: Will you do this yourself? Or will you hire an investment manager or advisor? Perhaps you will want to hire a manager while you learn, then gradually take more and more control over the management of your money as you gain confidence.
If you take the do-it-yourself route, go slowly and cautiously. Start by making sure your legal affairs are in order, that is, you have a will and you have protected yourself from liability through appropriate insurance. Next make sure you set aside money for an emergency fund, money you can access quickly without fouling up an investment plan.
Then invest half or more of your money in bond funds. Start with a short-term bond fund like those offered at Janus, Fidelity, Vanguard or T. Rowe Price. Invest the rest in a couple of conservative no-load equity funds. Four that come to mind are T. Rowe Price Spectrum Growth (PRSGX), the Fidelity Fund (FFIDX), Vanguard Total Stock Market Index (VTSMX), and Vanguard Tax-Managed Capital Appreciation (VMCAX).
As you learn more, you will probably want to diversify. Do this gradually and cautiously, and be patient. Expect to make mistakes along the way, and do your best to learn from them.
If you find a successful and experienced investor who is willing to be your mentor, consider entering that sort of relationship. But always use your common sense and remember that you, not anybody else, are the boss.
If you want to hire an investment manager or advisor, choose carefully. Seek references from friends and relatives. Ask for references from lawyers and accountants.
Here�s a parting thought, an excellent rule of thumb: Never invest in anything that you don�t understand.
If you do all these things, you will be well on your way to living comfortably ever after.
Paul Merriman is founder and president of Merriman Capital Management, a Registered Investment Advisory firm, and co-portfolio manager of the Merriman Mutual Funds. He manages over $280 million for his clients, has a weekly radio show which can be seen and heard at soundinvesting.com, and is the publisher and editor of FundAdvice.com.

http://finance.yahoo.com/education/begin_investing/article/101181/Advice_for_a_Novice

Random Walks Down Wall Street

Random Walks Down Wall Street

In the 1960s, Eugene Fama developed a new theory about the market called the Efficient Market Hypothesis. Fama determined that, at any given time, the prices of all securities fully reflect all available information about those securities.
While that doesn't sound so radical, most people who buy and sell stocks do so with the assumption that the stocks they are buying are undervalued and therefore worth more than the purchase price. When you haggle with a car dealer over the price of a new car, you're aiming for a price that's less than retail. When you buy a stock, you're also hoping that other investors have overlooked that stock for some reason, in effect giving you the opportunity to buy for "less than retail."
However, under the Efficient Market Hypothesis, any time you buy and sell securities, you're engaging in a game of chance, not skill. If markets are efficient and current prices always reflect all information, there's no way you'll ever be able to buy a stock at a bargain price.
Fama also asserted that the price movements of a particular stock will not follow any patterns or trends at all. Past price movements cannot be used to predict future price movements. He called this the Random Walk Theory -- stock prices move in an entirely random fashion, and there's no way to ever profit from "inefficiencies" in the price of a stock.
The end results of the Efficient Market Hypothesis and Random Walk Theory are controversial. If you can't predict stock prices, and picking stocks is really a matter of luck, how are we supposed to invest? And what are all those people on Wall Street doing, anyway?
Once you've resigned yourself to never beating the market, the Random Walkers say, you can be satisfied with matching the returns of the overall market. Instead of picking stocks or individual mutual funds, you should invest in the entire stock market. You can do this by investing in index funds, special mutual funds that are designed to allow you to match the returns of the overall market.

http://finance.yahoo.com/education/begin_investing/article/101173/Random_Walks_Down_Wall_Street

Modern Portfolio Theory Made Easy

Modern Portfolio Theory Made Easy

You can divide the history of investing in the United States into two periods: before and after 1952. That was the year that an economics student at the University of Chicago named Harry Markowitz published his doctoral thesis. His work was the beginning of what is now known as Modern Portfolio Theory. How important was Markowitz's paper? He received a Nobel Prize in economics in 1990 because of his research and its long-lasting effect on how investors approach investing today.
Markowitz starts out with the assumption that all investors would like to avoid risk whenever possible. He defines risk as a standard deviation of expected returns.
Rather than look at risk on an individual security level, Markowitz proposes that you measure the risk of an entire portfolio. When considering a security for your portfolio, don't base your decision on the amount of risk that carries with it. Instead, consider how that security contributes to the overall risk of your portfolio.
Markowitz then considers how all the investments in a portfolio can be expected to move together in price under the same circumstances. This is called "correlation," and it measures how much you can expect different securities or asset classes to change in price relative to each other.
For instance, high fuel prices might be good for oil companies, but bad for airlines who need to buy the fuel. As a result, you might expect that the stocks of companies in these two industries would often move in opposite directions. These two industries have a negative (or low) correlation. You'll get better diversification in your portfolio if you own one airline and one oil company, rather than two oil companies.
When you put all this together, it's entirely possible to build a portfolio that has much higher average return than the level of risk it contains. So when you build a diversified portfolio and spread out your investments by asset class, you're really just managing risk and return.

http://finance.yahoo.com/education/begin_investing/article/101172/Modern_Portfolio_Theory_Made_Easy

Risk may be unavoidable, it is manageable.

Risk and Return

Sure, you'd like to make a fortune in the markets -- who wouldn't? The first thing you need to understand, before you commit even a dollar to a portfolio or begin surfing investing Websites, is that it's impossible to realize a return on any investment without facing a certain degree of risk.
According to Webster's, risk is the "possibility of loss or injury." In investing, risk is the chance you take that the returns on a particular investment may vary. That's another way of saying that there are no sure things when you're investing.
No matter what you decide to do with your savings and investments, your money will always face some risk.
You could stash your dollars under your mattress or in a cookie jar, but then you'd face the risk of losing it all if your house burned possibly less dollars in real terms than when you started. Investing in stocks, bonds, or mutual funds carries risks of varying degrees.
The second fact you need to face is that in order to receive an increased return from your investment portfolio, you need to accept an increased amount of risk. Keeping your money in a savings account reduces your risk, but it also reduces your potential reward.
While risk in your portfolio may be unavoidable, it is manageable. The riddle of controlling risk and return is that you need to maximize the returns and minimize the risk. When you do this, you ensure that you'll make enough on your investments, with an acceptable amount of risk.

So, what constitutes acceptable risk?
It's different for every person. A good rule of thumb followed by many investors is that you shouldn't wake up in the middle of the night worrying about your portfolio. If your investments are causing you too much anxiety, it's time to reconsider how you're investing, and bail out of those securities that are giving you insomnia in favor of investments that are a little less painful. When you find your own comfort zone, you'll know your personal risk tolerance -- the amount of risk you are willing to tolerate in order to achieve your financial goals.
When it comes to your long-term financial future though, the biggest risk of all may simply be to do nothing. If you don't invest for retirement, or for the college education of your children, or to help meet your personal financial goals, then you're most likely guaranteed a future of just scraping by.

http://finance.yahoo.com/education/begin_investing/article/101171/Risk_and_Return

Learn the Basics of Investing

Learn the Basics of Investing
Overview
Types of Investments
Basic Investment Concepts & Strategies
Investment Tips
Overview
Getting Started in InvestingWorldlyinvestor.com
Advice for a NoviceWorldlyinvestor.com Back to Top
Types of Investments
Saving with Savings AccountsInvestorama.com
CDs: Low Risk, Low ReturnSmartMoney.com
What is a Stock Anyway?Investorama.com
What is a Mutual Fund?Investorama.com
Money Market Funds: Stash Your CashInvestorama.com
What is a Bond?SmartMoney.com
Savings Bonds: The Old ReliablesInvestorama.com Back to Top
Basic Investment Concepts & Strategies
Risk and ReturnInvestorama.com
Defense is the Best Offense: Basic Investing StrategiesSmartMoney.com
The Importance of DiversificationInvestorama.com
Understanding Asset AllocationInvestorama.com
Dollar Cost Averaging: Put Your Investing on Auto-PilotInvestorama.com
Modern Portfolio Theory Made EasyInvestorama.com
Random Walks Down Wall StreetInvestorama.com Back to Top
Investment Tips
Investment Record Keeping: Don't Drown in PaperInvestorama.com
Choosing a Financial AdvisorInvestorama.com
Beware the TelemarketerInvestorama.com
Don't Be a Victim of Fraud


Source: http://finance.yahoo.com/education/begin_investing

Thursday, 1 January 2009

Markets Cheer Calls to Overhaul Global Finance

Markets Cheer Calls to Overhaul Global Finance
By Bruce Crumley / Paris Monday, Oct. 20, 2008

In normal times, a French President's call for an overhaul of the world's financial system would cause eye-rolling and dyspepsia among the world's free market purists. But these are not normal times: on the weekend, U.S. President George W. Bush echoed Nicolas Sarkozy's push for an international summit to that end, and on Monday world markets seemed to endorse the initiative with a positive fillip. Though the specific goals, attendees, and even exact date and venue of such a meeting have yet to be determined, the mere agreement by U.S. and European leaders to update the Bretton Woods system — which has overseen international finance for the past 64 years — reaffirmed hopes that a collective, long-term approach to the worst economic crisis since the Great Depression was on the way.

Related
Stories
Asian Nations Step Up Support as Crisis Rolls On
Postcards from Europe's Financial Bust
More Related
Europe’s Hopes for Washington Summit Risk Being Dashed
Muted Hopes for Global Finance Summit
Europe’s Conservatives Sour On the Free Market


Alongside European Commission President José Manuel Barroso, Bush and Sarkozy called world leaders to join them at a monumental summit meeting in a U.S. city — probably at the United Nations in New York — shortly after the Nov. 4 U.S. presidential election. Following their huddle at Camp David Saturday, the trio issued a statement saying the extraordinary international congress would "review progress being made to address the current crisis and to seek agreement on principles of reform needed to avoid a repetition and assure global prosperity in the future."

That language scarcely matches the drama of the world financial crisis, but it did at least contribute to the modest optimism with which markets have attacked a new week of trading. Japan's Nikkei index climbed 3.6%, Hong Kong's Hang Seng rose 5.3%, and South Korea's Kospi jumped for the first time in a week: a 2.3% hike inspired in part by a $130 billion government assistance plan for banks announced in Seoul on Sunday.

Europe's leading bourses also began stronger, with London's FTSE 100 1.67% higher nearing mid-day Monday, while Paris CAC 40 gained 1.46% and Frankfurt's DAX up .8%. Futures trading in the U.S. similarly pointed to 2.4% opening advance Monday on Wall Street, though that early action could change as a series of company earnings figures are released, giving investors a better idea of how quickly U.S. economic growth has slowed.

Fears of a serious economic decline or even recession in the U.S. and world-wide explain the deep losses markets experienced last week after initially reacting with euphoria to the rash of government efforts to prevent finance and banking systems from imploding. As the week closed out, the global outlook was simply confused, as European indices generally finished higher, the Dow slumped 1.4%, and Asia's national markets featured both gains and losses.

Despite Monday's mostly rosier mood, there were developments that could have given markets as much to choke on than cheer about. Over the weekend the heads of French savings bank Caisses d'Epargne were forced to resign following revelations that unauthorized derivatives trading last week produced a $810 million loss. On Sunday, meanwhile, the Netherlands said it would inject a further $13.5 billion into troubled finance company ING — another indication that European banks may not yet have entirely accounted for all the toxic debt they assumed.

Still, markets were more inclined to take heart in the international summit agreement Sarkozy had obtained from Bush. Despite that advance, questions remain how much the U.S. and its free-market fans will the more invasive regulatory approach that Europe seems to favor. Even as they face dire economic crisis, Americans are quicker than Continentals to distrust perceived market "socialism." Indeed, even Bush and Sarkozy seemed to clash Saturday in how each weighed the virtues of regulation against the liberty of markets.

Not that it seemed to matter. "The fact that these are two conservative politicians that business leaders feel they can trust had a lot of impact," says French economist Bernard Maris, who also thinks markets were comforted by the decision to hold the conference in the U.S. — with an eye to historical continuity with the 1944 conference in Bretton Woods, NH, that established the International Monetary Fund. But Maris also notes those same markets — whose boom years relied largely on minimalist regulation — should logically be freaking out at Sarkozy's calls to "moralize" finance and limit pay to the world's biggest earners. So why the calm?

"For now, markets are getting into life boats on the short-term imperative of saving their lives, and will work to restore 'good old days' rules once the economy is back on solid ground," Maris says. "There is a school of thought that the best way of doing nothing at all is to demand everything be changed — and what we've been hearing from Sarkozy and Bush has been totally counter to what they'd constantly maintained before." Perhaps for that reason, the new tone hasn't struck fear into the markets, but there are still plenty of grounds for volatility as further details are worked out.



http://www.time.com/time/business/article/0,8599,1851963,00.html?xid=rss-business

Connect to this TIME Story
Europe’s Hopes for Washington Summit Risk Being Dashed
Muted Hopes for Global Finance Summit
Europe’s Conservatives Sour On the Free Market
People who read this also read
The 98-lb. Weakling18559771
The 98-lb. Weakling
Bretton Woods System19270488
As the creation of a new global economic system becomes increasingly like
Spend, Baby, Spend: US Budget Deficit to Soar Again19259169
Emergency spending brought on by the financial crisis is pushing red ink to

A Brief History of Bretton Woods System

Delegates attend the Bretton Woods conference in July of 1944 at the Mt. Washington Hotel in Bretton Woods, New Hampshire
Alfred Eisenstaedt / Time & Life Pictures / Getty


A Brief History of
Bretton Woods System
By M.J. Stephey Tuesday, Oct. 21, 2008

time:http://www.time.com/time/business/article/0,8599,1852254,00.html
Since the end of World War II, the U.S. dollar has enjoyed a unique and powerful position in international trade. But perhaps no more.


More Related
The Bright Side of Friday’s Dow Drop
Fix It Before It’s Broke
Summer Slump

Before boarding a plane on Saturday to meet President George W. Bush, French President Nicolas Sarkozy proclaimed, "Europe wants it. Europe demands it. Europe will get it." The "it" here is global financial reform, and evidently Sarkozy won't have to wait long. Just hours after their closed-door meeting had finished, Bush and Sarkozy, along with European Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso, issued a joint statement announcing that a summit would be held next month to devise what Barroso calls a "new global financial order."
The old global financial order is, well, old. Established in 1944 and named after the New Hampshire town where the agreements were drawn up, the Bretton Woods system created an international basis for exchanging one currency for another. It also led to the creation of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and the International Bank for Reconstruction and Development, now known as the World Bank.
The former was designed to monitor exchange rates and lend reserve currencies to nations with trade deficits, the latter to provide underdeveloped nations with needed capital — although each institution's role has changed over time. Each of the 44 nations who joined the discussions contributed a membership fee, of sorts, to fund these institutions; the amount of each contribution designated a country's economic ability and dictated its number of votes.

In an effort to free international trade and fund postwar reconstruction, the member states agreed to fix their exchange rates by tying their currencies to the U.S. dollar. American politicians, meanwhile, assured the rest of the world that its currency was dependable by linking the U.S. dollar to gold; $1 equaled 35 oz. of bullion. Nations also agreed to buy and sell U.S. dollars to keep their currencies within 1% of the fixed rate. And thus the golden age of the U.S. dollar began.

For his part, legendary British economist John Maynard Keynes, who drafted much of the plan, called it "the exact opposite of the gold standard," saying the negotiated monetary system would be whatever the controlling nations wished to make of it. Keynes had even gone so far as to propose a single, global currency that wouldn't be tied to either gold or politics. (He lost that argument).

Though it came on the heels of the Great Depression and the beginning of the end of World War II, the Bretton Woods system addressed global ills that began as early as the first World War, when governments (including the U.S.) began controlling imports and exports to offset wartime blockades. This, in turn, led to the manipulation of currencies to shape foreign trade. Currency warfare and restrictive market practices helped spark the devaluation, deflation and depression that defined the economy of the 1930s.
The Bretton Woods system itself collapsed in 1971, when President Richard Nixon severed the link between the dollar and gold a decision made to prevent a run on Fort Knox, which contained only a third of the gold bullion necessary to cover the amount of dollars in foreign hands. By 1973, most major world economies had allowed their currencies to float freely against the dollar. It was a rocky transition, characterized by plummeting stock prices, skyrocketing oil prices, bank failures and inflation.
It seems the East Coast might yet again be the backdrop for a massive overhaul of the world's financial playbook.
U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon publicly backed calls for a summit before the new year, saying the agency's headquarters in New York — the very "symbol of multilateralism" — should play host. Sarkozy concurred, but for different reasons: "Insofar as the crisis began in New York," he said, "then the global solution must be found to this crisis in New York."


**Consumer Confidence: A Killer Statistic

Consumer Confidence: A Killer Statistic
by Investopedia Staff, (Investopedia.com) (Contact Author Biography)
Story Tools


Consumer spending is the one key to any market economy. On the airwaves, there's never a shortage of data, analysis and cable commentary regarding consumer behavior. So what are the key fundamental consumption indicators in a good economy? How about in a bad economy? The following article will recap the vital economic indicators of overall consumption, outlining what trends to look for and when to look for them.

There is no doubt that consumer spending is the most vital component of any economy.
Why? Depending on the economy's sheer breadth, consumer spending can range anywhere from 50-75% of GDP. In the U.S. and most highly industrialized nations, this percentage is about 65% of total spending.

The first part of measuring total consumption is measuring consumer sentiment, which is derived completely from a consumer's standpoint.

Consumer Sentiment

The two numbers expressing consumers' feelings about the economy and their subsequent plans to make purchases are the Consumer Confidence Index, prepared by the Conference Board, and the Consumer Sentiment Index, prepared by the University of Michigan. Both indexes are based on a household survey and reported on a monthly basis. In analyzing any consumer sentiment index, it is most important to determine the trend of the index over several months. Simply put, the trend graphed out over four or five months is critical. Keeping this in mind, one needs to remain astute and block out news bits such as "the index is at 80 so things look gloomy" or "the level of consumer sentiment is up slightly from last month". The trend over several months - not a comparison of this month to the same month last year- is the undeniable benchmark. Commentary that focuses only on the single monthly figures, without looking at the developing trend, is misleading.

For many, the importance of the trends of consumer sentiment rests in the fact that the consumer sentiment indices originated in the middle of the 20th century, when it was safer to assume that the concept of the "typical" consumer was more homogeneous. Acknowledging this historical fact, as well as potential sampling bias and possible subjectivity across regions, the safe bet is to focus on trends forming some sort of linear progression, whether upwards or downwards, (or the progression can hit a general plateau, which sometimes happens when the economy shifts from stages in the business cycle).

Business Spending: A Leading Indicator

Though not as powerful an indicator as consumer spending, business capital spending can be a killer statistic - since things can get ugly in a hurry when overall business investment precipitously cuts back: the impact on the economy can be felt at an even faster pace than as if the cut occurred purely along consumer lines. The rationale is that today's sophisticated and large inventory-lean corporations often can gauge future demand before policy makers can implement changes, which often take months to kick in due to embedded policy lags.

Corporate spending is therefore very similar today to the role the stock market has played in most recoveries: improvements can be foreseen as a leading indicator for things to come. On the flip-side, cutbacks in corporate capital spending are indeed an ominous indicator.

The PMI, or Purchasing Managers Index, is a representation of the progress in corporate spending. For analyzing consumer spending, ascertainable trends are more telling than actual figures. The opposite is true for analyzing corporate spending through the PMI: there is a concrete threshold level for analyzing corporate investment spending and subsequent production. A PMI below 50 designates a contracting manufacturing sector, while above 50 highlights expansion across corporate spending and investment. Obviously, clear awareness of the current trend analysis is always better than a stand-alone result; nevertheless, the 50 threshold can be utilized as a simple benchmark to assess corporate activity.

In good times, the index is roaring in the high 50s, while in slow times the index can fall towards the low 40s.

Other Spending Items

There are other spending indicators, such as purchases of durable goods orders and overall auto sales; however, in terms of aggregating the data, these metrics are narrowly defined extensions of overall individual consumption. Trends across personal consumption will usually be reflected and correlated across these two metrics as well as others.

For instance, during the end of 2001, while the world economy was suffering on many fronts, steady consumer spending helped fuel auto sales that originated from generous no-financing from Detroit. This stimulus ultimately helped erode the three-quarter recession that had developed from the beginning of the year. Awareness of these symbols of consumption can give you more insight into exactly why and how consumption is impacting the economy. This awareness will help you judge the sustainability of these trends.

From a pure corporate standpoint, auxiliary spending, besides durable orders and big-ticket items such as auto purchases, can often indicate a great deal about overall corporate sentiment. Recall from above that the PMI for corporate spending is a definite quantitative measure, and the consumer sentiment index is a qualitative metric. In the eyes of large corporations and from a sheer qualitative standpoint, auxiliary spending on services such as advertising, consulting and information technology may reveal information about attitude and sentiment, just like the consumer sentiment indices reveal information about personal and individual consumption.

Just as a murky outlook will depress consumer sentiment, a weak forecast for the demand for goods and services will sidetrack corporate spending on auxiliary measures that can be budgeted away if necessary. The end-victims are advertising/marketing, media campaigns, consulting fees and information technology overhauls.

When the headlines indicate that layoffs and slowdowns are rampant in any of these fields, it can be safe to bet that corporate appetite for auxiliary spending is weak. Because the performance of these industries is largely tied to the level of corporate sentiment, a savvy investor should keep an eye out for companies within these industries and how they are performing.

Conclusion

Consumption is ultimately the stimulant behind almost every fundamental aspect of the worldwide economy. In sophisticated economies, the impact of consumption may be less than in emerging economies that are largely import-export driven, but the consumption magnitude is even more pronounced due to both a greater wealth effect and standard of living that enable individuals to spend more freely with disposable income.

The data for analyzing overall consumption contains many underlying factors. To scrutinize the daily volumes of indicators, focus on the indicators according to the above ranking system. This will help you capture the main elements and the interaction between the various areas of spending.

by Investopedia Staff, (Contact Author Biography)Investopedia.com believes that individuals can excel at managing their financial affairs. As such, we strive to provide free educational content and tools to empower individual investors, including more than 1,200 original and objective articles and tutorials on a wide variety of financial topics.

http://www.investopedia.com/articles/fundamental/103002.asp

How do government issued stimulus checks improve the economy?

Investment Question
How do government issued stimulus checks improve the economy?

Stimulus checks are payments given to individuals by the government based on taxes paid in the previous year. The hope is that the recipients of these checks will increase spending, thus stimulating the economy.

So how does it improve the economy?

A slow economy will have less flow of capital. This means less people spend, less businesses get money and therefore the businesses can not pay wages. Some businesses might even layoff workers. This creates a bad cycle and a slower economy.

A good economy will have a higher flow of capital; residents spend more, businesses make money, and employ more people who spend more.

Of course economies are much more complex with factors, such as inflation, international sales and standard of living. (To learn more check out Economic Basics and Macroeconomic Analysis.)By infusing money into an economy the government is attempting to increase the spending habits of individuals and general consumer confidence.

Ideally they will go out and spend the money which will help businesses maintain adequate cash flows to pay their bills and employ their workers. If placed into a savings account the banks will be able to lend out more money to more spenders. If used to pay debts the stimulus check could reduce the risks of defaulting on loans. It is a short run solution, primarily used in a lagging economy.

(To read more on consumer confidence and how it affects the economy, read Consumer Confidence: A Killer Statistic.)

http://www.investopedia.com/ask/answers/08/stimulus-checks-economy.asp?ad=feat_fincrisis

Recession-Proof Your Portfolio

Recession-Proof Your Portfolio
by Eric Petroff (Contact Author Biography)

While it would be utopian to have the economy grow at a stable rate, economic recessions are a fact of life and are as unavoidable as the setting of the sun. Like the sun, the economy goes through periods of rising (growth and expansion) and periods of setting (decline and recession).

In this article, we will look at how to properly invest as the economy moves through the setting phase - recession.

What is a Recession?

A recession can be defined as an extended period of significant decline in economic activity including negative gross domestic product (GDP) growth, faltering confidence on the part of consumers and businesses, weakening employment, falling real incomes, and weakening sales and production. This is not exactly the environment that would lead to higher stock prices or a sunny outlook on stocks.

Other aspects of recessionary environments as they relate to investments include a heightened risk aversion on the part of investors and a subsequent flight to safety. However, on the bright side, recessions do eventually lead to recoveries and follow a relatively predictable pattern of behavior along the way. (To read more about this, check out Recession: What Does It Mean To Investors?)

Keep an Eye on the Horizon

The real key to investing before, during and after a recession is to keep an eye on the big picture, as opposed to trying to time your way in and out of various market sectors, niches and individual stocks. Even though there is a lot of historical evidence of the cyclicality of certain investments throughout recessions, the fact of the matter is that this sort of investment acumen is beyond the scope of the ordinary investor. That said, there's no need to be discouraged because there are many ways an ordinary person can invest to protect and profit during these economic cycles. (To learn more about investing in cycles, read Understanding Cycles - The Key To Market Timing.)

To begin with, consider the macroeconomic issues of a recession and how they affect capital markets. When a recession hits, companies slow down business investment, consumers slow down their spending, and people's perceptions shift from being optimistic and expecting a continuation of recent good times to becoming pessimistic and uncertain about the future. As such, people get understandably frightened, become worried about prospective investment returns and rationally scale back risk in their portfolios. The results of these psychological factors manifest themselves in a few broad capital market trends.

Within equity markets, the results are pretty obvious. As people become uncertain about prospective earnings, they perceive a greater amount of risk in their investments, which broadly leads investors to require a higher potential rate of return for holding equities. Of course, for expected returns to go higher, current prices need to drop, which occurs as investors sell their higher risk investments and move into safer securities including government debt. This is why equity markets tend to fall, often precipitously, prior to recessions as investors shift their investments.

Recessions and Specific Investments

In fact, history shows us that equity markets have an uncanny ability to serve as a leading indicator for recessions. For example, the markets started a steep decline in mid-2000 before the economic recessionary period between March 2001 and November 2001. But even in a decline, there are pockets of relative outperformance to be found in equity markets.

Stocks

When investing in stocks during recessionary periods, the relatively safest places to invest are in high-quality companies with long business histories, as these should be companies that can handle prolonged periods of weakness in the market.

For example, companies with strong balance sheets, including those with little debt and strong cash flows, tend to do much better than companies with significant operating leverage (or debt) and poor cash flows. A company with a strong balance sheet/cash flow is better able to handle an economic downturn and should still be able to fund its operations as it moves through the weak economic times. In contrast, a company with a lot of debt may be damaged if it can't handle its debt payments and the costs associated with its continuing operations. (To learn how to read these documents, see What Is A Cash Flow Statement? and Breaking Down The Balance Sheet.)

Also, traditionally, one of the safe places in the equity market is consumer staples. These are typically the last products to be removed from a budget. In contrast, electronic retailers and other consumer discretionary companies can suffer as consumers hold off on these higher end purchases. (To learn more, read Cyclical Versus Non-Cyclical Stocks.)

Fixed Income

Fixed-income markets are no exception to this line of reasoning. Again, as investors become more concerned about risk, they tend to shy away from it. Practically speaking, this means investors steer clear of credit risk, meaning all corporate bonds (especially high-yield bond) and mortgage-backed securities because these investments have higher default rates than government securities.

Again, as the economy weakens, businesses have a more difficult time generating revenues and earnings, which can make debt repayment more difficult and could lead to bankruptcy as a worst case scenario.

Moreover, as investors sell these assets, they seek safety and move into U.S. Treasury bonds. In other words, the prices of risky bonds go down as people sell (or the yields increase) and the prices on Treasury bonds go up (or the yields decrease).

Commodities

Another area of investing you want to consider in the context of a recession is commodity markets. The general rule to understand about these investments is to keep in mind that growing economies need inputs, or natural resources. As economies grow, the need for natural resources grows, and the prices for those resources rise. Conversely, as economies slow, the demand slows and prices go down. So, if investors believe a recession is forthcoming, they will sell commodities, driving prices lower.

However, commodities are traded on a global basis, and U.S. economic activity is not the sole driver of demand for resources such as oil, gas, steel, etc. So don't necessarily expect a recession in the U.S. to have a direct impact on commodity prices, at least not as strong of an effect as we have seen in the past. At some point in time, the world's various economies will separate from the U.S., creating a demand for resources that is increasingly less sensitive to U.S. growth in GDP.

If you expect a recession, positioning your portfolio is quite simple. Shift assets away from equities, especially the riskiest equities like small stocks. You should also move away from credit risk in fixed-income markets and into Treasuries.

Investments and Recovery

So, what to do during a recovery? It sounds too simple, but investing for an economic recovery entails doing the exact opposite of what was described earlier.

Why?

Again, keep an eye ton the macroeconomic factors. For example, one of the most often used tools to reduce the impact of a recession is monetary policy that leads to a reduction in interest rates with the purpose of increasing the money supply, discouraging people from saving and encouraging spending. This helps to increase economic activity.

One of the side effects of low interest rates is they tend to creates demand for higher return, higher risk investments. So, as recessionary expectations bottom out, pessimism fades away and optimism works its way back into people's minds. Moreover, investors re-examine opportunities for riskier investments in the context of what is usually a low interest rate environment. They also embrace risk.

As a result, equity markets tend to do very well during economic recovery. Within equity markets, some of the best performing stocks are those that use operating leverage as part of their ongoing business activities, especially as these are often extremely undervalued after being beat up during the market downturn. Remember, leverage works great during good times, and these firms tend to grow earning faster than companies without leverage, but they also face real risks during weakening times. Moreover, growth stocks and small stocks tend to do well as investors embrace risk during an economic recovery. (To learn more about operating leverage, read Operating Leverage Captures Relationships.)

Similarly, within fixed-income markets, increased demand for risk manifests itself in a higher demand for credit risk, meaning the corporate debt of all grades and mortgage-backed debt tends to attract investors, driving prices up and yields down. Logically, U.S. Treasuries tend to go down in value as investors shift out of these assets and yields go back up.

The same logic holds for commodity markets in that faster economic growth means higher demand for materials, driving prices up. However, remember that commodities are traded on a global basis, and U.S. economic activity is not the sole driver of demand for resources.

Will the Sun Come Out Tomorrow?

To conclude, the best advice to investing during recessionary environments is to focus on the horizon and manage your exposures. It is important to minimize the risk in your portfolio and maintain your capital to invest in the recovery. Of course, you're never going to time the beginning or end of a recession to the day or the quarter, but seeing a recession far enough in advance isn't as hard as you might think. The real trick here is to simply have the discipline to step away from the crowd and shift away from risky, high-returning investments during times of extreme optimism, wait out the oncoming storm, and have an equal discipline to embrace risk at a time when people are shying away from it to get ahead of the cycle.

To keep reading about market recessions, check out Panic Selling - Capitulation Or Crash? and The Greatest Market Crashes.

by Eric Petroff, (Contact Author Biography)Eric Petroff is the director of research of Wurts & Associates, an institutional consulting firm advising nearly $40 billion in client assets. Before joining Wurts & Associates, Petroff spent eight years at Hammond Associates in St. Louis, another institutional consulting firm, where he was a senior consultant and shareholder. Prior to Hammond Associates, he spent five years in the brokerage industry advising retail clientele and even served as an equity and options trader for three of those years. He speaks often at conferences and has published dozens of articles for Investopedia.com and the New Zealand Investor Magazine.

http://www.investopedia.com/articles/08/recession.asp