Keep INVESTING Simple and Safe (KISS) ****Investment Philosophy, Strategy and various Valuation Methods**** The same forces that bring risk into investing in the stock market also make possible the large gains many investors enjoy. It’s true that the fluctuations in the market make for losses as well as gains but if you have a proven strategy and stick with it over the long term you will be a winner!****Warren Buffett: Rule No. 1 - Never lose money. Rule No. 2 - Never forget Rule No. 1.
Sunday, 19 April 2009
Will copper outshine gold and silver?
All the talk of metal investing in recent months has focused on the safe-haven and inflation hedge of gold. Yet other metals, notably copper and silver, have been starting to attract investor attention too.
By Paul Farrow
Last Updated: 7:55AM BST 18 Apr 2009
The copper price has risen by more than 50pc this year Photo: GETTY
All the talk of metal investing in recent months has focused on the safe-haven and inflation hedge of gold. Yet other metals, notably copper and silver, have been starting to attract investor attention too.
It is only a year ago that the commodity bull run was still in full swing. The wheels fell off in August, since when the price of metals has nose-dived. Orders for metals dried up overnight and the subsequent price falls have been deeper than during the worst years of the Great Depression.
But could there be glimmer of hope for a metals revival?
John Meyer, a mining analyst at Fairfax, the investment bank, thinks so. He is revising many of his metal forecasts upwards because of several factors, including a weaker US dollar, inflation fears and the renewed demand from China.
"The ratio of the copper price versus gold is at its lowest level since 1990 – people forget that many metals, not just gold, are a hedge against inflation. China is buying up copper and, while some see it as strategic buying, it also has to buy metals simply to maintain its economic growth," said Meyer. "Copper is our principal focus, although lead, zinc and tin may fare well too."
The revelation that China's State Reserves Bureau (SRB) has been buying copper on a scale that appears to go beyond the usual rebuilding of stocks for commercial reasons has caught many investors' imagination. There's even talk of China creating a 'copper standard' for the world's currency system.
Nobu Su, the head of Taiwan's TMT group, which ships commodities to China, said the next industrial revolution was going to be led by hybrid cars - and that needs copper. "You can see the subtle way that China is moving into 30 or 40 countries with resources," he said.
The SRB has also been accumulating aluminium, zinc, nickel and rarer metals such as titanium, indium (used in thin-film technology), rhodium (catalytic converters) and praseodymium (glass).
Evy Hambro, who runs the BlackRock World Mining investment trust, said the key question for metal commodities was whether the renewed demand for metals was due to companies restocking inventory levels which had been run down, or whether they were turning the capacity tap back on. If it is the former, the commodity revival could be short-lived.
He remained unconvinced that it was the latter. "We are not seeing a pick-up in demand in Europe or the US – and demand for commodities tends to slow in the summer in the northern hemisphere anyway. But we remain overweight copper, which has some of the best fundamentals."
Investors looking at copper ought to be aware that its price has risen by more than 50pc this year, so late joiners have missed some of the recovery already.
Hambro is still positive on gold, but is less convinced that aluminium will shine. Aluminium's price has fallen by more than half since last summer, but there is still a huge oversupply, which is unsupportive of a sharp price rise if demand turns.
The central banks' stimulus to kick-start the flagging car industry could also provide a fillip to metals. For example, more than 80pc of lead is used for car batteries, while 53pc of a car is made from steel.
Fairfax pointed out that sales of cars rose sharply in Germany in February after its government introduced a stimulus plan which allows consumers to trade an old car for a new one with state aid of €2,500. "That's a pretty huge increase – sales had fallen 14pc year-on-year in January," said Meyer.
Hambro agreed that fiscal stimulus would boost many metals involved in car production, but that it was difficult to judge when it would be seen to filter through. "If a car plan is announced in next week's Budget, will orders for aluminium rise sharply? Unlikely."
But early signs that the economic downturn may be reaching a floor have led many analysts to believe that silver could outperform gold. The debate about the relative merits of gold and silver was triggered because the world's largest consumer, India, did not import any gold in March for the second month running.
"In India you have people who can only afford silver and people who will only buy gold, but there are a large number of people in the middle who will rotate from gold to silver," said Ashok Shah, the chief investment officer at London & Capital.
That phenomenon is likely to be repeated in other countries as unemployment, salary cuts and potential tax rises take their toll on consumer spending. Eugen Weinberg, an analyst at Commerzbank, said: "Silver over the past 30 years has been the poor cousin. In the first half of the last century gold and silver were on a similar footing in terms of monetary value and their roles as safe havens."
Just as with copper, a measure of value is the ratio of gold to silver prices, which in the last century fell as low as 14 and compares with levels of around 70 now – suggesting gold is overvalued. Since the early 1980s the ratio has averaged about 65 and mostly ranged between 30 and 100.
Weinberg added: "The ratio could drop to between 40 and 50 in the medium term. People who cannot afford to buy gold for jewellery will buy silver."
Industrial demand for silver, including from the photography industry, is reckoned to be about 65pc of total global supplies, estimated at 895 tonnes. For gold, industrial and dental demand is about 11pc of supplies estimated at around 3,880 tonnes, according to consultants GFMS.
Part of the boost for silver will come from investment demand. With gold prices still near $900 an ounce, holdings of exchange- traded silver funds are expected to rise.
The iShares Silver Trust, the largest silver-backed exchange-traded fund listed in New York, holds a record 8,413 tonnes, a gain of more than 20pc since early January. That compares with a rise of more than 40pc in the SPDR Gold Trust, the world's largest gold-backed exchange-traded fund.
Metal commodities have become a staple part of many portfolios, as investors look for diversification and assets that are not correlated to the performance of shares. There are several ways you can get exposure to individual metals – one of the most popular is exchange-traded commodities (ETCs), which you can buy through most stockbrokers or online share dealers.
London-listed ETCs last week experienced net inflows for the fifth consecutive week, with precious metals ETCs seeing the largest inflows. They included ETFS Physical Gold ($38m), ETFS Physical Platinum ($14m) and ETFS Nickel ($2m).
The other option is to buy a unit or investment trust that invests in a spread of equity-related commodities. Popular funds include BlackRock World Mining, Investec Resource Enhanced or JPM Natural Resources.
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/personalfinance/investing/gold/5165209/Will-copper-outshine-gold-and-silver.html
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Gold: longest losing streak since August
Gold headed for its fourth weekly decline, the longest losing streak since August, as a global stock rally eroded demand for the metal as a store of value.
By Bloomberg staff
Last Updated: 4:19PM BST 17 Apr 2009
Gold eased as Asian stocks advanced on growing confidence the global recession is easing. Investment in the SPDR Gold Trust, the biggest exchange-traded fund backed by bullion, dropped to 1,119.43 metric tons after holding at a record high of 1,127.68 tons the previous four days.
“Further strength in equity markets would signal an increasing risk appetite, which would be detrimental to precious metals, which have relied on safe-haven demand for support as the majority of commodity prices collapsed under the weight of rapid and severe economic deterioration,” said Toby Hassall, an analyst at Commodity Warrants Australia Pty.
Bullion for immediate delivery fell for a second day by as much as 0.4pc to $872.63 an ounce. It traded at $873.30 in Singapore, down 1pc for the week. Gold has fallen 4.6pc in the past month while the benchmark MSCI Asia Pacific Index soared 18pc.
US stocks rose after the government said fewer Americans filed claims for jobless benefits last week, and as JPMorgan Chase & Co posted better-than-expected earnings yesterday. A day earlier, US consumer prices posted their first annual decline since 1955, alleviating concern that Federal Reserve actions will cause inflation to soar.
“Over the longer term however, unprecedented fiscal and monetary stimuli have increased inflationary expectations, which will be constructive to gold prices,” said Hassall.
Among other precious metals for immediate delivery, silver was down 0.5pc at $12.18 an ounce, platinum gained 0.4pc to $1,211.50 an ounce, and palladium climbed 0.4pc to $234.50 an ounce.
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/personalfinance/investing/gold/5172424/Gold-longest-losing-streak-since-August.html
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A 'Copper Standard' for the world's currency system?
Hard money enthusiasts have long watched for signs that China is switching its foreign reserves from US Treasury bonds into gold bullion. They may have been eyeing the wrong metal.
By Ambrose Evans-Pritchard
Last Updated: 2:41PM BST 16 Apr 2009
Comments 83 Comment on this article
China's State Reserves Bureau (SRB) has instead been buying copper and other industrial metals over recent months on a scale that appears to go beyond the usual rebuilding of stocks for commercial reasons.
Nobu Su, head of Taiwan's TMT group, which ships commodities to China, said Beijing is trying to extricate itself from dollar dependency as fast as it can.
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"China has woken up. The West is a black hole with all this money being printed. The Chinese are buying raw materials because it is a much better way to use their $1.9 trillion of reserves. They get ten times the impact, and can cover their infrastructure for 50 years."
"The next industrial revolution is going to be led by hybrid cars, and that needs copper. You can see the subtle way that China is moving into 30 or 40 countries with resources," he said.
The SRB has also been accumulating aluminium, zinc, nickel, and rarer metals such as titanium, indium (thin-film technology), rhodium (catalytic converters) and praseodymium (glass).
While it makes sense for China to take advantage of last year's commodity crash to restock cheaply, there is clearly more behind the move. "They are definitely buying metals to diversify out of US Treasuries and dollar holdings," said Jim Lennon, head of commodities at Macquarie Bank.
John Reade, metals chief at UBS, said Beijing may have a made strategic decision to stockpile metal as an alternative to foreign bonds. "We're very surprised by Chinese demand. They are buying much more copper than they will need this year. If this is strategic, there may be no effective limit on the purchases as China's pockets are deep."
Zhou Xiaochuan, the central bank governor, piqued the interest of metal buffs last month by calling for a world currency modelled on the "Bancor", floated by John Maynard Keynes at Bretton Woods in 1944.
The Bancor was to be anchored on 30 commodities - a broader base than the Gold Standard, which had caused so much grief in the 1930s. Mr Zhou said such a currency would prevent the sort of "credit-based" excess that has brought the global finance to its knees.
If his thoughts reflect Communist Party thinking, it would explain the bizarre moves in commodity markets over recent weeks. Copper prices have surged 49pc this year to $4,925 a tonne despite estimates by the CRU copper group that world demand will fall 15pc to 20pc this year as construction wilts.
Analysts say "short covering" by funds betting on price falls has played a role. But the jump is largely due to Chinese imports, which reached a record 329,000 tonnes in February, and a further 375,000 tonnes in March. Chinese industrial demand cannot explain this. China has been badly hit by global recession. Its exports - almost half GDP - fell 17pc in March.
While Beijing's fiscal stimulus package and credit expansion has helped lift demand, China faces a property downturn of its own. One government adviser warned this week that house prices could fall 50pc.
One thing is clear: Beijing suspects that the US Federal Reserve is engineering a covert default on America's debt by printing money. Premier Wen Jiabao issued a blunt warning last month that China was tiring of US bonds. "We have lent a huge amount of money to the US, so of course we are concerned about the safety of our assets," he said.
This is slightly disingenuous. China has the world's largest reserves - $1.95 trillion, mostly in dollars - because it has been holding down the yuan to boost exports. This mercantilist strategy has reached its limits.
The beauty of recycling China's surplus into metals instead of US bonds is that it kills so many birds with one stone: it stops the yuan rising, without provoking complaints of currency manipulation by Washington; metals are easily stored in warehouses, unlike oil; the holdings are likely to rise in value over time since the earth's crust is gradually depleting its accessible ores. Above all, such a policy safeguards China's industrial revolution, while the West may one day face a supply crisis.
Beijing may yet buy gold as well, although it has not done so yet. The gold share of reserves has fallen to 1pc, far below the historic norm in Asia. But if a metal-based currency ever emerges to end the reign of fiat paper, it is just as likely to be a "Copper Standard" as a "Gold Standard".
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/comment/ambroseevans_pritchard/5160120/A-Copper-Standard-for-the-worlds-currency-system.html
IMF warns over parallels to Great Depression
The International Monetary Fund has warned of "worrisome parallels" between the current global crisis and the Great Depression, despite the unprecedented steps already taken by central banks and governments worldwide.
By Ambrose Evans-Pritchard, International Business Editor
Last Updated: 8:42PM BST 17 Apr 2009
Comments 8 Comment on this article
This recession is likely to be "unusually long and severe, and the recovery sluggish," said the Fund, releasing two advance chapters from its World Economic Outlook. However, it warned there is a risk that it could spiral down into a full-blown slump unless further action is taken to stop "feedback effects" gathering force.
Dominique Strauss-Kahn, head of the IMF, said millions of people risk being pushed back into poverty as the economic storm ravages the most vulnerable countries. "The human consequences could be absolutely devastating. This is a truly global crisis, and nobody is escaping," he said.
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"The free-fall in the global economy may be starting to abate, with a recovery emerging in 2010, but this depends crucially on the right policies being adopted today."
Mr Strauss-Kahn called for a urgent action to "cleanse banks" of toxic assets and for further fiscal stimulus beyond the 2pc of global GDP already agreed. The snag is that high-debt countries may have hit the limits already.
"The impact becomes negative for debt levels that exceed 60pc of GDP," said the Fund.
While no countries were named, this would raise questions about Japan, Germany, France, Italy and ultimately Britain and the US after their bank rescues.
The IMF said the US is at the epicentre of this crisis just as it was in the Depression, setting the two episodes apart from normal downturns. However, the risks are greater this time. "While the credit boom in the 1920s was largely specific to the US, the boom during 2004-2007 was global, with increased leverage and risk-taking in advanced economies and many emerging economies. Levels of integration are now much higher than during the inter-war period, so US financial shocks have a larger impact," it said.
The IMF said the global financial system is still under acute stress, with output tumbling and inflation falling towards zero in key nations. "The risks of debt deflation have increased," it said.
Abrupt halts in capital flows can have "dire consequences" for emerging economies, it said. Eastern Europe has already suffered the effects, with a 17.6pc fall in industrial production in February. The region is highly vulnerable to the credit crunch since it owes more than 50pc of its GDP to Western banks.
Synchronised world recessions striking all major regions are "historically rare" events, the Fund said. They last one and a half times as long typical downturns, and are followed by painfully slow recoveries.
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/financetopics/recession/5166956/IMF-warns-over-parallels-to-Great-Depression.html
##In every crisis, there exists some opportunities. Be brave.
Almost one million UK home owners in negative equity, says CML
Almost one million home owners in negative equity, says CML
Almost one million home owners are in negative equity, the Council of Mortgage Lenders has suggested.
By Myra Butterworth, Personal Finance Correspondent
Last Updated: 7:54AM BST 18 Apr 2009
It claimed that about 900,000 home owners currently have some degree of negative equity, where the value of their home is less than their mortgage.
Bob Pannell, head of research at the CML, said negative equity had "resurfaced" as house prices have fallen and that it "will contribute to subdued property turnover".
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However, the CML said the majority of those in negative equity - around two thirds - face only modest shortfalls of less than 10 per cent, equating to around £6,000 for those first-time buyers with negative equity, and £8,000 for other home-buyers.
The CML's estimate is less than some economists' predictions that nearly four million home owners are already suffering from the predicament. And it is still less than the 1.5 million households estimated to have negative equity at the depth of the last housing market slump in 1993.
It said: "Falling house prices have once again raised the prospect of negative equity for borrowers. Although negative equity may reduce a household's coping strategies should they encounter payment difficulties, it does not of itself affect the ability to keep up mortgage payments or create a risk of repossession."
Comment: Probably not dire. Once the housing problems settled and confidence returns, these negative equities will disappear. Should inflation sets in, the losses may turn to gains.
Banking Industry Showing Signs of a Recovery
By ERIC DASH
Published: April 16, 2009
Just three short months ago, many of the nation’s biggest banks were on life support.
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Now, a number are showing glimpses of a recovery, aided by a tentative improvement in some corners of the economy and new business picked up from rivals that stumbled in the wake of the financial crisis.
On Thursday, JPMorgan Chase became the latest bank, after Goldman Sachs and Wells Fargo, to announce blockbuster profits in the first quarter. The reports fed a rally in financial stocks that began more than five weeks ago, when Citigroup and Bank of America, two of the banks hit hardest by the crisis, suggested the worst might already be over.
Banks are enjoying a fresh wave of profits from the government’s efforts to nurse the industry back to life. Ultralow interest rates have led flocks of consumers to seek deals on mortgage loans. Investment banking and trading activities are enjoying a bounce from the billions of dollars spent to thaw frozen credit markets. And even before the results of a new health test for the nation’s 19 largest banks are unveiled, those who can flaunt an improvement from their dismal recent performance are quickly trying to free themselves from government money.
But this silver cloud has a dark lining: millions of consumers continue to default on their mortgages, home equity and credit card loans. Corporate loan losses are just starting to pile up. And the residential housing crisis is seeping into commercial real estate with a vengeance: on Thursday, General Growth Properties, one of the nation’s largest mall operators, filed for bankruptcy in one of the biggest such collapses in United States history.
“We are in the eye of the storm,” Gerard Cassidy, a banking analyst at RBC Capital Markets. “The worst is behind us for housing. For commercial real estate and corporate lending, there is still a big dark cloud.”
JPMorgan Chase reported a $2.1 billion profit in the first quarter, besting analysts’ average forecasts. Revenue increased to $25 billion, up 45 percent from $16.9 billion in the period last year.
Still, the results reflected continued turmoil in sectors like credit card services and private equity, businesses that reported losses or steep drops in revenue, reflecting the lingering effects of the recession on consumer spending and the credit markets.
Many banks are preparing for the next rainy stretch, setting aside more money now to cover future loan losses. Regional and community lenders, which are particularly exposed to corporate and real estate loan defaults, are socking away tens of millions of dollars to add to their reserves; big banks like JPMorgan are adding billions. “Times aren’t exactly great as we speak,” Michael J. Cavanagh, the bank’s finance chief, said in a brief interview. “Until home prices stabilize and unemployment peaks, we will continue to be under pressure for losses on our balance sheet.”
As long as interest rates remain low, and the government continues to offer financial support, banks hope to earn enough profit to cushion the blow of some of these looming losses.
The question remains whether the profitability is sustainable if the recession worsens.
Some experts are saying fears of nationalization and bank solvency are subsiding. “What we are recognizing now is that they can produce profits,” Charles Peabody, a financial services analyst at Portales Partners. “The next debate is on the sustainability of those profits.”
With good reason: the banking industry has gotten relief from recent changes to accounting rules, which could inflate earnings.
What’s more, a brief moratorium on home foreclosures during the winter will postpone when some banks book losses on a big swath of soured loans. At the same time, banks have benefited from unusually good trading results and low interest rates, which have propped up the value of their mortgage investments.
The official stress test findings, expected to be released on May 4, may help investors sort out the handful of banks that can generate enough earnings to absorb their losses if the economy worsens. Their conclusions may bear little resemblance to banks’ first-quarter results because the stress test is taking a forward-looking view of the banks’ conditions over the next two years. Quarterly earnings reports, by their nature, look back.
Officials involved in the stress test say they expect the results to show that some banks will need to raise fresh capital. A senior administration official emphasized, however, that those banks would not necessarily need new government money. Besides tapping private investors, banks could derive a major source of capital by converting the preferred stock now held by the government into common shares, as Citigroup intends. The Treasury is likely to rely on individual banks to release their results, and officials said they expected banks that need more capital to immediately announce plans for raising it.
But even ahead of the stress test, investors already appear to be rendering verdicts on which banks will emerge as survivors. Goldman Sachs shares are around $121. Citigroup shares, which fell below $1 in March, are trading at just over $4; Bank of America’s shares have rebounded to above $10.
On Tuesday, Goldman Sachs raised $5 billion of fresh capital in anticipation of repaying the government’s investment.
Jamie Dimon, JPMorgan’s chairman and chief executive, was adamant on Thursday that his company would pay back $25 billion as soon as regulators allowed. “Folks, it has become a scarlet letter,” said Mr. Dimon, referring to the taxpayer infusion the bank received in October. “We could pay it back tomorrow,” he said. “We have the money.”
Mr. Dimon added that his bank did not plan to be a buyer or seller in the Treasury’s public-private partnership program to siphon loss-making investments from banks’ books. “We’re certainly not going to borrow from the federal government because we’ve learned our lesson about that,” Mr. Dimon said.
Stephen Labaton contributed reporting from Washington.
http://www.nytimes.com/2009/04/17/business/17bank.html?em
Saturday, 18 April 2009
Tips for Investors Just Starting Out
These tips help investing newbies seize the day.
By Hilary Fazzone 04-14-09 06:00 AM
Not so long ago, my newly employed friends and I applauded ourselves for being responsible and choosing to make high automatic contributions to our 401(k)s. A few years later, we've hardly been rewarded for taking the "prudent" route. Far from watching our savings grow, we've lost much of it.
For those of us in our twenties who are beginning to generate income and wondering how to make the most of our savings, the behavior of the stock market during the past few years has been uninspiring to say the least. To start, the performance of domestic equities over the past 10 years has been unimpressive. If one invested $10,000 in the Dow Jones Wilshire 5000 Index, which tracks the 5,000-largest public companies in the United States and which is a nearly complete representation of the broader stock market, three years ago, it would have been worth about $6,500 at the end of March 2009 (based on the return of SPDR DJ Wilshire Total Market TMW), an exchange-traded fund that tracks the Wilshire 5000).
What's more, the precipitous marketwide downfall that characterized the second half of 2008 called into question for many the worth of diversification, as nearly all asset classes apart from Treasury bonds suffered severe blows. This came as a shock to those who believed that diversification would help them avoid portfoliowide stumbles. Furthermore, the deleterious and hard-to-predict impact that heavy-hitting, low-transparency vehicles such as hedge funds have had on the broader market recently, combined with the market's recent apparent disregard for company fundamentals, has left many less-sophisticated investors feeling as though the deck is stacked against them.
Yet investor sentiment often runs the most negative when it's most opportune to invest, and right now is shaping up as a golden opportunity for newbies. By many measures, stocks look cheap. Although they've been early, many of the mutual fund managers with whom Morningstar analysts speak daily have been touting the cheapness of stocks for months.
Brian Rogers, T. Rowe Price's chief investment officer and manager of T. Rowe Price Equity Income (PRFDX), has said that stocks look inexpensive relative to historic norms. Marty Whitman and Ian Lapey have been increasing their personal investments in their own Third Avenue Value (TAVFX ) for the attractiveness of its current portfolio. Chuck Royce and Whitney George have been bargain-hunting for their Royce Premier (RYPRX ) portfolio.
Morningstar's stock analysts agree. The Market Valuation Graph that values in aggregate the entire universe of stocks covered by Morningstar analysts showed a ratio of 0.81 on Friday, April 3, meaning that stocks are 19% undervalued, according to our analyst team. Warren Buffett also agrees. The stock market cap/gross domestic product ratio that he uses to gauge the market's attractiveness indicates that as of March 2009, the total value of publicly traded U.S. stocks represented just more than 60% of GDP. At the end of 2007, by contrast, the stock market represented more than 140% of GDP. Buffett thinks that a higher ratio indicates overvaluation while a lower ratio indicates undervaluation.
For all of the uncertainties that plague the market, the long-term upside potential appears to be there, and the rewards are apt to be particularly great for new investors who have many years to see their investments compound.
How to do it is the question. What follows is an introductory, though not exhaustive, explanation of some of the best ways to begin investing.
Index Funds
One of the most difficult decisions in investing is what kind of stocks to buy. Broadly diversified index funds make that decision easier by giving you exposure to many different companies and industries in a single mutual fund. The Dow Jones Wilshire 5000 Index, for example, captures practically every stock in the U.S. market. The Russell 2000 tracks the smaller end of the market-cap range, and so forth. In addition to providing one-stop diversification, index funds can also be cheap. Traditional index funds and exchange-traded funds that track major indexes typically cost much less than actively managed mutual funds. Fidelity is an industry leader on the low-cost index-fund front. Vanguard also provides some of the most competitively priced index funds and offers them with relatively low minimums, which make it easier for new investors to dip their toes in the water. Dan Culloton, editor of Morningstar's Vanguard Fund Family Report, examined in a recent article how index funds fared during the recent bear market, and the results were competitive with active funds' returns.
All-In-One Funds
Generally speaking, those of us in the early stages of our investing careers can tolerate higher stock allocations, which can present greater downside risk but also greater return potential, because we have longer time horizons over which to recoup our losses. Still, given the behavior of the stock market in recent years and the uncertainties that do remain in the current downturn, new investors may be uncomfortable having the bulk of their assets in stocks. All-in-one funds such as those in Morningstar's moderate-allocation category provide a nice middle ground, giving you stock exposure but also muting volatility with some bonds and cash. Target-date funds are an all-in-one, low-maintenance way to shift from a higher to a lower stock allocation over time as your risk tolerance decreases. Both target-date and moderate-allocation funds tend to offer smoother rides than equity-only funds and are good alternatives for those who would like to start investing but are nervous about the downside risk of equities. Morningstar's Analyst Picks in the moderate-allocation and target-date categories are a great place to start looking for topnotch all-in-one options.
Dollar-Cost Averaging
When to buy a particular stock or mutual fund is another hot topic for investors just starting out. It's a mistake to get too hung up trying to buy and sell at the perfect time; the typical investor isn't any good at calling the market's highs and lows. Dollar-cost averaging, which is the default investing method for most 401(k) plans, is an easier way. Once you've decided that a certain stock or fund is a good long-term fit for you, dollar-cost averaging enables you to invest in it gradually and regularly over time. By investing uniform chunks of money at set intervals, you reduce the chance that you'll be putting a lot of money to work right before the market goes down. For a more in-depth discussion of dollar-cost averaging, click here.
There is much more to investing than the simple tips I've laid forth here, such as navigating fund fee structures and understanding investment vehicles such as 401(k)s, but these introductory guidelines are a good start for investors who are wary of the stock market and wondering how to make good, basic decisions at a time when opportunity is abundant.
http://news.morningstar.com/articlenet/article.aspx?id=286673
****Warren Buffett MBA Talk on Investing and Stock Market Wisdom (Videos)
Warren Buffett is the richest guy in the whole world and his wisdom on stock market, value investing and corporate governance is priceless. Many people from all over the world come and listen to him. When it comes to value and growth investing methodology, Warren Buffett is the guy.
Warren Buffett talk to MBA students on various topics ranging from business management to investing for growth. Visit this site to see the 10 parts video: http://tradeorinvest.com/warren-buffett-investing-and-stock-market-wisdom-mba-talk/.
These are also posted below. Enjoy them.
Warren Buffett MBA Talk - Part 1
Warren Buffett MBA Talk - Part 2
Warren Buffett MBA Talk - Part 3
Warren Buffett MBA Talk - Part 4
Warren Buffett MBA Talk - Part 5
Warren Buffett MBA Talk - Part 6
Warren Buffett MBA Talk - Part 7
Warren Buffett MBA Talk - Part 8
Warren Buffett MBA Talk - Part 9
Warren Buffett MBA Talk - Part 10
5 Reasons To Avoid Index Funds
by Wayne Pinsent (Contact Author Biography)
Modern portfolio theory suggests that markets are efficient, and that a security's price includes all available information. The suggestion is that active management of a portfolio is useless, and investors would be better off buying an index and letting it ride. However, stock prices do not always seem rational, and there is also ample evidence going against efficient markets. So, although many people say that index investing is the way to go, we'll look at some reasons why it isn't always the best choice. (For background reading, see our Index Investing Tutorial and Modern Portfolio Theory: An Overview.)
1. Lack of Downside Protection
The stock market has proved to be a great investment in the long run, but over the years it has had its fair share of bumps and bruises. Investing in an index fund, such as one that tracks the S&P 500, will give you the upside when the market is doing well, but also leaves you completely vulnerable to the downside. You can choose to hedge your exposure to the index by shorting the index, or buying a put against the index, but because these move in the exact opposite direction of each other, using them together could defeat the purpose of investing (it's a breakeven strategy). (To learn how to protect against dreaded downturns, check out 4 ETF Strategies For A Down Market.)
2. Lack of Reactive Ability
Sometimes obvious mispricing can occur in the market. If there's one company in the internet sector that has a unique benefit and all other internet company stock prices move up in sympathy, they may become overvalued as a group. The opposite can also happen. One company may have disastrous results that are unique to that company, but it may take down the stock prices of all companies in its sector. That sector may be a compelling value, but in a broad market value weighted index, exposure to that sector will actually be reduced instead of increased. Active management can take advantage of this misguided behavior in the market. An investor can watch out for good companies that become undervalued based on factors other than fundamentals, and sell companies that become overvalued for the same reason. (Find out how to tell whether your stock is a bargain or a bank breaker in see Sympathy Sell-Off: An Investor's Guide.)
Index investing does not allow for this advantageous behavior. If a stock becomes overvalued, it actually starts to carry more weight in the index. Unfortunately, this is just when astute investors would want to be lowering their portfolios' exposure to that stock. So even if you have a clear idea of a stock that is over- or undervalued, if you invest solely through an index, you will not be able to act on that knowledge.
3. No Control Over Holdings
Indexes are set portfolios. If an investor buys an index fund, he or she has no control over the individual holdings in the portfolio. You may have specific companies that you like and want to own, such as a favorite bank or food company that you have researched and want to buy. Similarly, in everyday life, you may have experiences that lead you believe that one company is markedly better than another; maybe it has better brands, management or customer service. As a result, you may want to invest in that company specifically and not in its peers.
At the same time, you may have ill feelings toward other companies for moral or other personal reasons. For example, you may have issues with the way a company treats the environment or the products it makes. Your portfolio can be augmented by adding specific stocks you like, but the components of an index portion are out of your hands.(To learn about socially responsible investing, see Change The World One Investment At A Time.)
4. Limited Exposure to Different Strategies
There are countless strategies that investors have used with success; unfortunately, buying an index of the market may not give you access to a lot of these good ideas and strategies. Investing strategies can, at times, be combined to provide investors with better risk-adjusted returns. Index investing will give you diversification, but that can also be achieved with as few as 30 stocks, instead of the 500 stocks an S&P 500 Index would track. If you conduct research, you may be able to find the best value stocks, the best growth stocks and the best stocks for other strategies. After you've done the research, you can combine them into a smaller, more targeted portfolio. You may be able to provide yourself with a better-positioned portfolio than the overall market, or one that's better suited to your personal goals and risk tolerances. (To learn more, read A Guide To Portfolio Construction.)
5. Dampened Personal Satisfaction
Finally, investing can be worrying and stressful, especially during times of market turmoil. Selecting certain stocks may leave you constantly checking quotes, and can keep you awake at night, but these situations will not be averted by investing in an index. You can still find yourself constantly checking on how the market is performing and being worried sick about the economic landscape. On top of this, you will lose the satisfaction and excitement of making good investments and being successful with your money.
Conclusion
There have been studies both in favor and against active management. Many managers perform worse than their comparative benchmarks, but that does not change the fact that there are exceptional managers who regularly outperform the market. Index investing has merit if you want to take a broad economic view, but there are many reasons why it's not always the best route to achieving your personal investing goals.
by Wayne Pinsent, (Contact Author Biography)
http://investopedia.com/articles/stocks/09/reasons-to-avoid-index-funds.asp?partner=basics4b1
Bears Retreat As Bullish Tilt Spreads
Bears Retreat As Bullish Tilt Spreads
Paul Katzeff
Thursday April 16, 2009, 7:36 pm EDT
Glaciers continued to melt. But investors were not quite ready to declare the Ice Age over in the April Merrill Lynch survey of global fund managers.
Optimism about growth reached its highest since early 2004. A net 24% of managers said the global economy will strengthen in the next 12 months.
Last month the percentage of managers who expected global growth equaled the portion who forecast worsening GDP. In January a net 24% forecast further contraction.
"March's apocalyptic bearishness has been replaced by reluctant bullishness," said Michael Hartnett, co-head of Banc of America Securities-Merrill Lynch international investment strategy.
Managers believe the worst is over in terms of the global slowdown. "But there is no bull market euphoria," Hartnett said.
China remained the main catalyst for optimism. The U.S. was a key too. But the brighter outlook broadened to include Europe and Japan.
In March a net 1% of managers feared China's economy would slow in the year ahead. This month 26% see China growing.
Going forward, bulls will be watching for signs that economies are responding to government stimulus steps, Hartnett said.
Bears will win if China slows more than expected and banks disappoint.
Sentiment regarding bank stocks finally warmed, as 26% of managers said they are underweight. Underweights hit a record 48% in March.
"That has triggered a classic rotation out of defensive sectors like consumer staples, telcos, pharmas and utilities, into cyclical sectors like consumer discretionary, industrials and materials," Hartnett said.
Technology is now the most popular global sector, he added.
Another sign of growing appetite for risk: the percentage of managers overweight in cash fell to 24% from March's 38%.
Also, the average cash balance fell to 4.9% from 5.2%.
And the portion of managers underweight in equities fell to 17% vs. 41% in March.
Pessimism about corporate profits continued to fall. Only 12% of managers this month saw slower profit growth vs. 29% last month. Pessimism peaked at 74% in October.
A warmer outlook regarding GDP and corporate profit growth impacted views on inflation. The portion of managers expecting inflation to fall over the next 12 months slipped to a net 18%. Last month 42% expected lower inflation.
That was also reflected in the net 16% who expected higher short-term interest rates within 12 months vs. 17% expecting the opposite last month. April's was the first view for higher rates in 10 months.
The portion of managers who view stocks as undervalued dropped to 30% from March's 42%.
That hurt the outlook for bonds, with only 9% of managers overweight in April vs. March's 26%. In April, 37% saw bonds as overvalued, the same as March's view.
Managers boosted their stakes in emerging markets, with a net 26% overweight vs. 4% a month ago.
The U.S. was the only other region where managers were overweight, at 14% of managers.
http://finance.yahoo.com/news/Bears-Retreat-As-Bullish-Tilt-ibd-14952322.html?.v=1
Is This Rally for Real?
by Mick Weinstein
Posted on Friday, April 17, 2009, 12:00AM
The S&P 500's rapid 26 percent rise since its March 9 low has investors wondering if stocks have put in a meaningful bottom. Has the time come to put new money to work in equities, or is this a mere bear market rally that will unwind shortly as indexes plumb new lows? Both cases rely on speculation regarding the macroeconomic picture, as traditionally the stock market has served as a leading indicator of broader economic recovery -- an indicator, that is, which one can only really observe in retrospect. Ben Bernanke, for one, sees "green shoots" of recovery sprouting up.
Here's one helpful starting place on the matter: a comparison chart of 4 Bad Bear Markets that DShort updates daily. Or in another (more humorous) framework, are we in Stage 13 or Stage 15 of this investor psychology chart? Econobloggers weigh in on both sides:
The 'This Rally's Got Legs' Camp
• Portfolio manager J.D. Steinhilber says this move should have staying power. Steinhilber cites "the sheer magnitude of the bear market declines in broad stock indexes (60%!) over the past 18 months" and believes "[t]he immensity of the government's stimulus efforts, both fiscal and monetary, which now total a mind-boggling $4 trillion, appear to be taking hold in the economy and markets." Steinhilber finds foreign stocks to be particularly attractive here.
• Doug Kass made a bold and timely market bottom call in March ("perhaps even a generational low") and remains bullish, but now names some "nontraditional headwinds" to be wary of.
• Both Scott Grannis and Bill Luby see a bullish sign in volatility falling back significantly of late. And Grannis notes that industrial metal prices have bounced: "Maybe it's the return of the speculators, but even if it is, it reflects a return of animal spirits and suggests that monetary policy is easy enough for people to start releveraging."
• Hedge fund manager Dennis Gartman also uses industrial metals as a leading indicator, and as Market Folly notes, Gartman uses the Baltic Dry Index and the Transports as signs we're exiting recession. In response to these all moving upward recently, Gartman "wants to be long copper and Alcoa, and short the Yen," as the Japanese are big importers of commodities.
• Octagon Capital technical analyst Leon Tuey sees extreme pessimism in the current CBOE put/call ratio and that, pushed along with massive new liquidity from the Fed, are signs "we are not witnessing a bear market rally, but a bull market, the magnitude and duration of which will surprise everyone."
• Jeff Miller of NewArc Investments sees a lot of skepticism about any positive economic signs. But Miller uses a remarkable sportsman's model to suggest we really may be moving upwards.
The 'Sucker Rally, Don't Buy It' Camp
• Tim Iacono has his eye on unemployment data: "Conventional wisdom over the last fifty years or so is that, during recessions, stocks make a bottom at around the same time that monthly job losses peak... If past is precedent and if the recent January decline in nonfarm payrolls of 741,000 turns out to be the peak for this cycle, then it is reasonable to believe that the March low in equity markets could be a lasting bottom. However, if either of those are untrue -- that this downturn will be different than previous recessions or that job losses have not yet reached their peak -- then we are more likely to see new lows sometime later this year. In my view, that is the most likely scenario."
• Tyler Durden believes quant funds drove up the market in March, in a "distortion rally" that lacked broad-based support: "Risk managers allocating capital to quants are prolonging and exacerbating the long-term bear markets in equities, creating an atmosphere of distrust and making markets unreliable tools of price discovery and playgrounds for rampant, Atlantic City-like speculation. In the words of both a NYSE chairman and a famous credit index trader, 'This will all end in tears.'"
• Peter Cooper says "the absurdness of this sucker's rally ought to be obvious to all... Unemployment is still rising, house prices are still falling, and the fundamentals of bank balance sheets are still deteriorating."
• Likewise, Henry Blodget finds the "'suckers' rally' argument far more persuasive than the 'new bull market' one...About the best we can say is that, after 15+ years of overvaluation, stocks are finally priced to produce average returns over the next decade (9%-10% a year or so)."
• Investor Sajal has a nice roundup of how various market gurus (Marc Faber, George Soros, Jim Rogers, and more) see things here. Most believe that we're in for further downside, and that this rally is not to be trusted.
• Finally, James Picerno says the trend may now be our friend, but still: "Even if the recession has bottomed out, that's a long way from saying that a return to growth is imminent. It's likely that the economy will tread water for several quarters at the least once the economy stops contracting. And while the stock market appears inexpensive, or at least fairly priced, it's still too early to expect that profits are set to rebound any time soon."
http://finance.yahoo.com/expert/article/stockblogs/157195;_ylt=AtyB1.Ieu7cNm2kW0kHNNvO7YWsA
Friday, 17 April 2009
Morningstar's Approach to Analyzing Mutual Funds
The five key questions we ask.
By Karen Dolan, CFA 03-13-08 06:00 AM
If you're a regular reader of Morningstar's fund analyst reports or if you're wondering why you should care about what we have to say about a mutual fund, it may help to understand how we approach fund analysis.
First, a Priority Check
"Investors First" is one of Morningstar's five core values and it is of utmost importance to our team of mutual fund analysts. This is reflected in the priorities we bring to our fund analysis. We are independent thinkers and put individual investors' interests first. In addition, we strive to be opinionated, letting investors know whether a particular fund is worth owning and why. We base that opinion on rigorous analysis, not just past performance. We do our best to keep investors up to date on changes affecting their fund investments. And, we keep a long-term time horizon.
These goals are top of mind as we analyze the nearly 2,000 funds on our coverage list. Our research combines qualitative and quantitative factors. In other words, we do not screen funds and base our recommendations solely on easy-to-measure backward-looking figures. To really get at the heart of what makes a fund a good or bad investment, our research process incorporates a wide variety of information including regular interviews with fund managers and on-site fund company visits, as well as comprehensive reviews of a fund's strategy, fees, portfolio positioning, and risk profile. We also look at a fund's record, but in detail, evaluating how it performed in various market conditions and considering if it had different managers or strategies in different periods. That's a lot, but it can all be grouped in the following five questions:
How good are the fund's managers and analysts?
When purchasing a mutual fund, you are hiring a management team to pick securities for you. That's why we pay extra close attention to the people contributing to the research process. We place a great deal of emphasis on getting to know the manager who is making the calls in the portfolio, but our research doesn't end there. We also key in on everyone integral to the process --from the research staff to the firm's chief executive and chief investment officers. That background helps us spot potential weaknesses and determine whether a manager's departure is a dealbreaker for shareholders.
While Morningstar analysts value experience, we also are always on the prowl for promising managers who may not have reached investing-legend status. Usually, these managers are running far smaller sums and are thus more flexible than today's stars, so there's a lot of room for upside if we can discover them early on. We like to see managers with a solid investment philosophy and an investing temperament that resembles the great investors'. We also look for managers practicing a consistent, repeatable process.
What is the strategy and how well is it executed?
Very rarely do we come across a strategy that sounds downright awful. There are too many smart consultants and marketers out there for that to happen. Yet, there's a big difference between having an investment strategy that could add value and one that actually does.
Morningstar analysts consider a fund's strategy and assess management's chances in using it to deliver peer-beating returns over the long term. Investing is a competitive sport. In order for a fund to do well over a long time horizon, we firmly believe that some combination of its strategy, process, execution, people and fees have to give it a lasting edge over rivals.
Because we talk to most portfolio managers at least twice a year, we can keep tabs on how they're implementing their strategy. We can compare the actions we see in the portfolio with the strategy they claim to follow. We're looking for managers who can stick with their approach and have conviction in their research, rather than those who abandon their strategy when the market disagrees or those who show a lack of confidence in their process.
Our understanding of the strategy also helps us put performance into context and set investors' expectations regarding the risks associated with it. Is it a deep-value fund or an aggressive-growth fund? Does it specialize in a small market niche or cover a broad swath of the universe? Does the fund focus more on relative returns versus a benchmark, or does it value absolute returns and capital preservation? The answers to those questions help us gauge how a fund might fare in different environments and how it might be used in a portfolio.
Is the fund a good value proposition?
We've conducted a number of studies on expenses and our findings have been loud and clear: Expenses are one of the most reliable predictors of future performance. So, Morningstar analysts focus on them and have a hard time pounding the table for funds that charge prices too far above their average peer. We take a holistic approach and look at a fund's costs and factors that can affect fees, such as asset size. But in general, we think there's a lot of fat in mutual fund expense ratios and there are many funds of all sizes with low fees.
The expense ratio isn't the only cost to keep an eye on, though. Transaction costs, including brokerage commissions and the market impact of large or illiquid trades can also chip away at a fund's returns. And, investors in taxable accounts need to be wary of the tax costs of owning a mutual fund. Some managers' strategies and trading methods are very tax-aware, while others ignore that factor altogether. Where there are hidden costs, we point them out and incorporate them into our overall opinion of a fund.
The expense ratio, transaction costs, and tax consequences make up the overall hurdle that fund managers must clear before any gains are passed on to investors. If the overall hurdle rate is high, we're likely to have less confidence in the fund's ability to overcome those impediments and deliver a good end result for shareholders.
Have the fund and its advisor been shareholder-friendly?
When investing hard-earned money, trust is paramount, and we've found the interests of fund companies are not always in line with the interests of fund investors. High fees and more assets can be good for the fund company, but they're not good for fund shareholders, for example. To get behind the question of trust and ascertain how well the fund treats its shareholders, we issue Stewardship Grades to roughly 1,000 funds. A fund's Stewardship Grade is based on our fund analysts' evaluation of five main components: corporate culture, fund board independence, fund manager incentives, fees, and regulatory history. We don't suggest that investors choose their investments solely on our Stewardship Grades, but we've found that strong stewardship and investment merit often go hand in hand.
Why has the fund performed the way it has?
We all know that past performance isn't predictive of future results, but it's still tempting to focus on a fund's recent past. We pay attention to performance, but we analyze the drivers of long-term performance and put a fund's record in context. For example, we look at results during discrete stretches of market stress to add some clarity about the fund's downside risks. In addition, some funds harbor sector-specific or market-cap biases that can cause them to perform differently from peers at times.
Rather than rely exclusively on the standard three- and five-year measures of performance, we also consider performance over more meaningful time periods, such as a manager's tenure on the fund, extreme swings in market returns, or a full market cycle. In addition, we value consistency. Strong trailing returns, even over the past three or five years, could stem from a short stretch of hot performance. More consistent performance tends to lead to better long-term results that are easier for investors to handle.
We look for portfolio risks that could, but haven't yet, materialized. Sometimes that will lead us to favor a fund that is more conservative over a fund that has higher returns but may be headed for a big fall. We think this is important because we've found that investors haven't owned volatile funds very successfully. Investors often buy bumpy funds when they're high and sell when they're low. In addition, it's hard for investors to recover from losses. Funds that are prone to large, extended losses have to gain that much more to get back to even.
Keeping our Own Discipline
Just as we require strong investment philosophies and consistency from mutual fund managers, we demand the same level of discipline from ourselves. Our goal is to help guide investors toward the industry's best funds. Doing so sometimes means standing behind an underperforming manager when we believe in his or her talent, strategy, and process. It also helps us avoid the latest hot trend that looks great today, but could have devastating consequences for investors down the road. Our calls are sometimes unpopular with readers and fund companies, but we stand behind our approach because we firmly believe it helps investors over the long haul.
http://news.morningstar.com/articlenet/article.aspx?id=231481
How to Start a Small Business Now
A tough economic climate can be the best time to become an entrepreneur
By Kimberly Palmer
Posted March 19, 2009
Ylisa Sanford Seymour, an Ameriprise financial advisor based in Santa Rosa, Calif., has seen people fail—and succeed—at executing their small business dreams. She says one of the most important first steps is making sure family members, who will be directly affected by the ups and downs of the new business, are on board and supportive. U.S. News spoke with Seymour about how to launch a small business in the current economic environment. Excerpts:
What are the pros and cons of starting a small business in this kind of economic environment?
It can be a really great time to start a business, which is antithetical to what people presume. The down market can provide lower costs of real estate in terms of leasing space and lower labor costs because people are willing to work for less or for deferred payments with the option of equity. Larger groups of people are open to taking that chance of being an entrepreneur, because being laid off is that kick in the butt to take their idea to the next level.
Things to consider include whether you have enough operating capital so if you have payables that haven't come in for 30, 60, or 90 days, you can still operate. For a lot of businesses, like a restaurant, you need to plan on not turning a profit for three years. So identifying your niche and having a well thought out strategic plan is paramount. Focusing on service, especially in a down market when people are less willing to part with their dollars, is the key to repeat clientele.
Are there types of businesses that are best to stay away from in a down market?
Some of the businesses that will be harder hit include more of the discretionary type of services, such as salons and spas. Certain franchises, such as large brand name ones that charge up to $20 million just to get the franchise license, are something you might want to stay away from. Something with a lower initial start-up cost, like an original idea, [could make more sense]. You also have to look at the overall environment. Sandwich shops are a good business model, but they're overly saturated.
What about good ideas?
Clients who have automotive repair shops are doing well because people right now are rehabbing or refurnishing things. Clients have seen revenues increase because people are fixing their cars, rather than replacing them. Some service industries related to what happens when people get laid off, such as job counseling, continuing education, or retraining schools continue to do well.
Do most small businesses fail, especially during a recession?
It's a high percentage that fail—upwards of 50 percent within the first three years. Some of the major issues are not having a well-thought out business plan, the inability to execute on an idea, and not having sufficient reserves and cash flow. They may not be able to get funding to start their business from traditional sources like the Small Business Administration, so they might be focused on their family or home to finance the business, which can be extremely risky.
In this kind of market, are friends and family a good source of loans?
That's a personal decision. If you lend money to [a friend or family member], you need to be willing to give with expectation that you'll never get it back. Money within families can sometimes change the nature of a relationship and very rarely do I see it paid back or paid back with the interest that is quoted.
If you have a good idea, you should be able to make a go of it from traditional sourcing of lending, such as micro-lending programs, different business associations, the Small Business Administration, and different angel investing sources. Family should be the last source. If your business fails, you still want to be able to go home for Thanksgiving.
What are the benefits of starting your own business in an industry that you've already been working in?
That will certainly help people, but I don't know if it's a requirement. Some of the most innovative businesses have been started by people who have no connection to what they're doing. One of my clients is a retired nuclear physicist, but she likes bookkeeping. Experience in the field is not a requirement.
Will the stimulus package help small business owners?
Business owners are looking at more attractive Small Business Administration loan rates. [Businesses that already have bank-issued loans will be able to take out interest-free loans of up to $35,000.] Clients who bought dental or medical practices are looking at refinancing some of their business loans, so they're thinking about expansion on a level they might not have before. That will help to create jobs.
http://www.usnews.com/articles/business/your-money/2009/03/19/how-to-start-a-small-business-now.html
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Best Small Businesses to Start
Best Small Businesses to Start
Learn from the examples of entrepreneurs who’ve succeeded in these hot start-up areas
By Matthew Bandyk
Posted November 13, 2008
America's economic future is uncertain. Unemployment is up sharply. Credit is tight. People are worried about their savings. So is it a great time to start a business? "Are you crazy?" might be the quick answer.
But it's not necessarily the right answer. Starting a business has always been a bold, risky move. Even in good economic times, the failure rate of new small businesses is high. But a well-conceived business can always catch on.
So how can a wannabe entrepreneur succeed? U.S. News's Best Small Businesses to Start springs from the idea that those who stand on the shoulders of giants can see the farthest. The entrepreneurs behind the types of start-ups we profile here have defied the odds, finding both profit and an enjoyable, independent lifestyle along the way.
We interviewed over a dozen experts, quizzing them about the economic trends that will most affect small businesses in the years ahead. Then we looked at where entrepreneurs can capitalize on these trends. The 15 start-up ideas here aren't about cashing in on hot fads. They're a way to help you be among the first to catch waves that won't crash down anytime soon.
"The first question you have to ask yourself [before you start a business] is which are the sectors where I have knowledge, skills, and contacts to operate in," says Jeff Cornwall, director of the Center for Entrepreneurship at Belmont University. The 15 Best Small Businesses to Start include a variety of sectors.
Start with this economic trend: the millions of baby boomers who are beginning to retire now. Small businesses like Guava Home Care in Hockessin, Del., are filling the increasing demand for home healthcare, helping seniors stay in their homes and be more independent. Small businesses can offer the human touch and specialized service that larger ones may find hard to provide.
Another trend is globalization. More U.S. businesses than ever are connected with the world. There's a huge market out there for American entrepreneurs to sell to, and it's growing. "There's going to be an equivalent to the U.S. middle class created each year over the next decade" in the developing world, says Steve King of the Institute for the Future.
Some entrepreneurs—be they companies going global or outsourcing firms—educate and train businesses in the new game of globalization. Export managers link domestic buyers with foreign sellers.
The demand for energy efficiency and an environmentally friendly footprint is also spurring entrepreneurship. Energy auditors help businesses and homes save money by reducing energy costs.
In the increasingly competitive field of education, fledgling higher education services like New Mountain Ventures are finding ways to keep people in school.
Parents worried about their kids' development are willing to pay top dollar to athletic trainers in hopes of creating the next star athletes. They also will hire professional tutors who can give their kids the individualized attention that the major test-prep companies maybe cannot.
Today's struggling economy may itself present opportunities. Businesses slammed by the economic slowdown often look to cut back and focus on their most essential tasks. That can mean contracting out jobs once done in-house. Outsourcing does not have to mean moving American jobs overseas. Indeed, the demand for corporate outsourcing has created a profitable opportunity for smart, nimble entrepreneurs who can help bigger companies save. With her website virtualhires.com, Rosemary Zalewski of Cleveland, Ohio places virtual assistants who do freelance administrative work at big companies. Similarly, freelance Web writer Melissa Rudy of wordsbymelissa.com lands projects writing online content for companies that don't have the staff to do it themselves. She now makes more money self-employed than she did working as a technical writer.
Modern communication tools also make it easier for start-ups to get off the ground. Social networking sites and blogs help entrepreneurs, like career counselors and financial advisers, establish their expertise and credibility. And customers can find you today with a mouse click. Sellers of fresh produce are using the Internet to cater to the growing demand for organic food: You can place your order on online farmers' markets and have it delivered to your house.
Many of the Best Small Businesses to Start can be run from a home office, cutting start-up costs. Alex Chamandy of Arlington, Va., runs a computer repair business from his basement. An art dealer is at home today online as much as in a gallery.
It's not just old businesses that are being revolutionized. Some start-ups, like online consignment stores, are a brand-new type of business. Purely online businesses may be more recessionproof than traditional small businesses, as they're not "tied into any particular slowdowns in that local area," says Pamela Slim, author of the Escape from Cubicle Nation blog.
Best Small Businesses to Start shows you how you can make your start-up more likely to succeed. The businesses on our list are certainly not the only way for entrepreneurs to succeed in today's economy (please let us know about your ideas for great start-ups by sending a message to smallbizcenter@usnews.com). But we hope this will get you started.
http://www.usnews.com/articles/business/best-small-businesses/2008/11/13/best-small-businesses-to-start.html
15 Best Small Businesses to Start
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