Saturday 19 November 2011

The corrosive effect of inflation explained.

"Inflation has turned £100 into less than £20"
One stockbroker explains the corrosive effect of inflation.


Increasing inflation combined with low interest rates means many offshore savers will be getting poor rates of return on savings accounts
The dangers of inflation Photo: Larry Lilac / Alamy
How would you feel if you bought a security for £100 back in 1971, and it was worth less than £20 today? Unfortunately, if you are over 60 years old, as I am, you will probably have done exactly this, as this is how much the purchasing power of sterling has fallen over this period.
To put it the other way around, had I gone into a supermarket 40 years ago and bought a trolley of goods for £20 and then returned to the supermarket today to buy the same trolley of goods, it would cost me £240.
Inflation is the most insidious investment risk, but its destructive power is frequently ignored by investors and financial regulators alike. There is a tendency to believe that if you save a pound, then, providing you get your pound back, plus a return while you were not using the money, all is well.
Wrong! Money is simply a form of exchange and its true value is determined by what it can purchase, not by its face value.
For the value of your money on deposit to hold its purchasing power, you would have to generate an interest income, after tax, equal to the rate of inflation. Even to a standard-rate taxpayer, that demands a return of 6.25pc with inflation at 5pc. What is more, you can't spend it – you have to save it.
Even over the past five years, from October 2006, the purchasing power of £1 has fallen to 84p.
Where is inflation going from here? The truth is that while short-term inflation can be predicted with some accuracy, and in the short term it is likely to decline as certain known increases of a year ago fall out, no one knows where it is going in the longer term.
There hangs the rub. Many commentators, and I would count myself among them, believe that the level of quantitative easing being undertaken by the Bank of England will result, in the longer term, in further serious – if not hyper – inflation.
In such an environment, monetary assets will decline in purchasing power, while, on the basis of historical precedent, physical assets such as property and shares will maintain their value in real terms.
The conventional wisdom, as one gets older, is to reduce exposure to equities and increase the money on deposit or in fixed income. The risk in this is that we have no idea how long we will live for, but with increasing life expectancy one is potentially exposing oneself to inflation risk for an indeterminate period of time.
Historically, this made sense – as shares generated less than fixed-income securities, so it was logical to go for the higher income and greater certainty. However, today, with the London equity market yielding 4pc after tax, equivalent to 5pc before tax, it is difficult to get an improvement from long-dated fixed-income securities and impossible from gilts or money on deposit.
I would therefore advise a higher equity content for portfolios today and, while I recognise that it is difficult to do so, I would also urge an investor to try to ignore the volatility in capital values, both good and bad, and focus on the dividends.
History tells us that over the years dividends have more or less maintained their purchasing power relative to inflation throughout most of the chaos that the world has thrown at us, and they have done so by steady growth and none of the volatility shown by the equity capital values.

Friday 4 November 2011

Chinese rich are keen to emigrate

Chinese rich are keen to emigrate
Updated: 2011-11-03 11:35

By Shi Jing and Yu Ran (China Daily)






Chinese rich are keen to emigrate





SHANGHAI - About 60 percent of the rich Chinese people, each of whom has a net asset of at least 60 million yuan ($9.44 million), said they intended to migrate from China, a report has found.

About 14 percent of them have either already migrated from China or have applied for migration.

The three most favored destinations by the Chinese rich are the United States, Canada and Singapore. The US is the first choice of some 40 percent of the people interviewed, according to a white paper jointly released by Hurun Report and the Bank of China (BOC) on Saturday.

According to US Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS), the number of Chinese applicants for investment immigration has exceeded applications from any other country or region.

Last year, the USCIS issued 772 EB-5 visas, meant for investor immigrants, to Chinese people. They account for 41 percent of the total EB-5 visas issued by the agency.

"Among all the destinations in terms of investment immigration, the US always outstand all other options as the country does not impose any quota," said Jiao Lingyan, a client executive of the investment immigration department of the Beijing-based GlobeImmi International Education Consultation Co.

"The minimum amount required for investment immigration to the US is $500,000. But it should be noted that this applies to investments in projects recommended by authorities in the US. People considering these projects should take into account that they may not make profits," Jiao said.

"It is worth noting that the minimum amount for investment immigration will be raised in the coming years, because the number of rich people in China is rapidly growing," she said.

Among the 980 people interviewed by Hurun Report and the BOC, one-third said they have assets overseas, which on an average account for 19 percent of their total assets.

While 32 percent of the interviewees said they have invested overseas with a view to immigrate, half of them said they did so mainly for the sake of their children's education.

Zhang Yuehui, a Beijing-based immigration expert, said children's education is also the top concern among those who want to immigrate.

"A growing number of parents in China have realized that children growing up in the examination-oriented education system in China will find it hard to compete in an increasingly globalized world," Zhang said.

Wang Lilan, 38, a mother of two who immigrated to Australia from her home province of Fujian two years ago, was one of those parents.

"My 12-year-old elder daughter used to do her homework very late into the night. But here in Australia, she does quite a lot practical assignment, in a playful way. And she has more spare time to do the things she likes," Wang said.

"I feel very delighted to see my children having fun while studying," Wang said.

Chinese immigrants are also getting younger, with the largest group aged between 25 and 30, compared to the 40-45 age group in the past, Zhang said

http://www.chinadaily.com.cn/business/2011-11/03/content_14028075.htm

Tuesday 1 November 2011

MIS-SELLING STOCKS: "Buying the Dip", "Averaging In" and "Buy and Hold"

Das argues that many expressions used by financial advisers are an attempt to defend bad advice. Cheekily, he puts ''buying the dip'', ''averaging in'' and ''buy and hold'' into this category.

"If you believe that shares only go one way, which is up, then every time they go down, it's a buying opportunity,'' he says. ''If a stock was good value at $10 then it must be cheap at $9 and a bargain at $8. People forget that the lowest it can go is zero."

Averaging-in, or dollar-cost-averaging, is a strategy designed to avoid trying to time the market and investing all your money at the wrong time.

The idea is that by investing small amounts regularly you buy more when prices are low and less when prices are high. Left to their own devices, most people do the opposite.

This works well in a rising market but when prices are falling you simply throw good money after bad and keep fund managers in business.

"The only way out of a hole is to stop digging," Das says.

The buy-and-hold strategy is based on the premise that if you hold a stock long enough it will make money.

This may be true for good quality stocks some of the time but it is not an excuse to nod off at the wheel. Some stocks are lemons and there are times when it pays to reduce your overall exposure to shares and invest in something that provides a better return.

"People forget that after the 1929 crash it took 25 years to recover,'' Das says. ''The Japanese market has never regained its high of 1989."



The ABCs of GFC jargon


Are you scared of Dutch disease? And would a haircut help? Barbara Drury wonders if even self-described experts know what they're talking about.
Financial markets are home to some of the worst abuses of the English language and some of the greatest creativity. The language of the street, from Wall Street to Bond and Collins Street, also tells us a lot about the world we live in.
When financial markets are falling and the outlook is uncertain, the temptation is to gild the lily, obfuscate or engage in self-denial.
Financial adviser and Money contributor Noel Whittaker is fed up with industry insiders who refuse to call a spade a spade.
A protester holds stones during violent protests around Syntagma square in Athens.
Off the hook ... a bailout means Greece has no incentives to change its ways. Photo: Reuters
He says a loss is no longer called a loss but a ''negative return''.
Similarly, ''negative growth'' is a recession by another name, says Satyajit Das, author of Extreme Money: The Masters of the Universe and the Cult of Risk. Das likes to quote US cowboy and commentator Will Rogers, who once said you can't say civilisation doesn't advance when in every war they kill you in a new way.
"Financial markets find more ways of losing money every time," Das says.
One way to keep your head, and your savings, while everyone around you is losing theirs is to cut through the jargon, hype and obfuscation to reveal what lies beneath. The following is just a small sample of the current argot.
QUANTITATIVE EASING (QE)
QEI and QEII are not stately ocean liners but successive attempts at economic shock therapy administered by America's central bank, the US Federal Reserve (the Fed).
The only thing quantitative easing has in common with a royal barge is that they are both very big and difficult to manoeuvre in a tight spot.
The chief economist at AMP Capital Investors, Shane Oliver, explains: "In traditional economics you try and change the price of money [by raising or lowering interest rates], but when interest rates are already zero you try and change the quantity of money to boost growth."
This is how it works.
Quantitative easing is a policy that aims to increase the supply of money circulating in the economy to boost economic activity and avoid a recession.
Central banks do this by printing money and buying bonds from high-street banks such as Bank of America.
If all goes well, the banks lend this money to businesses and individuals to spend on goods and services. That's the theory. Unfortunately, it hasn't worked.
Oliver says American consumers are so concerned about job security and their future economic prospects that they are reluctant to borrow, even when interest rates are close to zero, for fear they won't be able to repay their loans.
So all that freshly minted money is trapped in bank accounts with the Federal Reserve while the US economy limps on without the shot of financial adrenalin it needs.
Oliver calls this a classic ''liquidity trap'' - but that's another story.
DUTCH DISEASE
Not to be confused with Dutch-elm disease, a fungus that is deadly to elm trees, although Dutch disease is potentially as lethal to branches of the economy. The term Dutch disease was first used to describe the situation in the Netherlands in the 1960s when the discovery of North Sea natural gas deposits resulted in a resources boom and rising currency at the expense of manufacturing exports. Sound familiar?
In Australia's case, a rise in the price of commodities has fuelled a mining boom, pushing up the value of the Australian dollar as well as wages.
Not only do local manufacturers face rising wage costs in the competition for workers but the rising dollar makes it difficult to compete with cheaper overseas goods and services.
Despite the similarities, Oliver argues that Australia faces structural problems that were not around in the '60s. "In Australia, it is not just Dutch disease we are facing but an increase in competition from emerging economies,'' Oliver says. ''Chinese workers get paid a fraction of what our workers get paid."
MIS-SELLING STOCKS
Das argues that many expressions used by financial advisers are an attempt to defend bad advice. Cheekily, he puts ''buying the dip'', ''averaging in'' and ''buy and hold'' into this category.
"If you believe that shares only go one way, which is up, then every time they go down, it's a buying opportunity,'' he says. ''If a stock was good value at $10 then it must be cheap at $9 and a bargain at $8. People forget that the lowest it can go is zero."
Averaging-in, or dollar-cost-averaging, is a strategy designed to avoid trying to time the market and investing all your money at the wrong time.
The idea is that by investing small amounts regularly you buy more when prices are low and less when prices are high. Left to their own devices, most people do the opposite.
This works well in a rising market but when prices are falling you simply throw good money after bad and keep fund managers in business.
"The only way out of a hole is to stop digging," Das says.
The buy-and-hold strategy is based on the premise that if you hold a stock long enough it will make money.
This may be true for good quality stocks some of the time but it is not an excuse to nod off at the wheel. Some stocks are lemons and there are times when it pays to reduce your overall exposure to shares and invest in something that provides a better return.
"People forget that after the 1929 crash it took 25 years to recover,'' Das says. ''The Japanese market has never regained its high of 1989."
THE 2/20 RULE
To an outsider, the world of hedge funds makes as much sense as the lyrics of a Beatles song from their acid-tripping days. They use strategies with names that shed little light on their activities, such as market neutral, short bias, quantitative directional and discretionary thematic.
The main reason for these patently silly names is to convince investors that hedge fund managers are very clever chaps who can miraculously make money in both rising and falling markets.
Some hedge fund managers are undoubtedly skilled but many others used the long-market boom to cash in on humanity's relentless and fruitless quest to turn lead into gold.
"My view is that they will lose money in all seasons," Das says. Many have done just that.
Das points out that hedge fund managers have an expression for the premium they charge for their supposedly superior skills - the 2/20 rule.
That is, they charge a management fee of 2 per cent of the money you invest with them and take 20 per cent of your investment gains (it goes without saying that they don't refund 20 per cent of losses).
A traditional fund manager generally charges about 1 per cent of funds under management. The only difference between the two managers is often their name. The most important thing with hedge funds is not the label but the ingredients.
Hedge funds use a variety of strategies, the most important being:
❏ Short-selling: the practice of selling securities you do not own in the hope or expectation of buying them back at a lower price for a profit (see below).
❏ Leverage: the use of borrowing to increase potential profits but at the risk of increasing potential losses.
❏ Hedging: the use of short-selling as insurance against loss in another part of the portfolio, rather than as pure speculation.
In the past decade, these strategies have gone mainstream. Many traditional fund managers use them, as do the new investment products that were responsible for some of the worst losses of the global financial crisis such as the ones following.
CDOs IN THE GFC
''Structured product'' is code for risk, even though they claim to do the opposite and offer protection against market risk.
"You can't have a product that says 'I will rip you off and give you more risk', so product providers say 'we will give you a structured product'," Das says.
The term ''structured product'' has a ''safely engineered'' ring to it. Unfortunately, when faced with a product that is potentially hazardous to wealth, the temptation is to give it a name so mind-numbingly bland and meaningless that investors will be lulled into complacency. Like ''collateralised debt obligations'', or CDOs.
In 2007, veteran commentator Ian Kerr dubbed them ''Chernobyl death obligations'' after the Russian nuclear disaster. And toxic they were.
The CDOs offered to investors before the global financial crisis bundled together thousands of mortgages to spread the risk of any one mortgage-holder defaulting. The mortgage pool was divided into several ''tranches'', or slices, with varying degrees of risk so they could be sold to investors with different risk tolerances.
Das likens the structure to buying an apartment in a flood-prone area. Buying an apartment on the eighth floor might seem risk-free when the high water mark reaches only the second floor. But a severe flood weakens the foundations and makes the whole building unsafe. That's what happened to investors who thought they were protected by the ''safe'' CDO structure when the GFC tidal wave of mortgage defaults hit.
To make matters worse, CDOs were what is referred to in the trade as derivatives or synthetic instruments. In other words, they were designed to look and feel like a mortgage-backed investment but they weren't the real thing. Instead, they invested in things that mimicked the performance of mortgage-backed securities.
If you are still confused, take heart. Most of the guys who sold the things either didn't know, or didn't want to know, how they worked either.
The GFC has not cured financial markets of their taste for derivatives.
A new rash of financial products based on derivatives is entering the market, promising to inoculate investors against further market falls.
The only protection against investment losses is common sense, education and discrimination - and they are free of charge for anyone with the discipline and patience to develop them.
Shave and a haircut
There is a difference between obfuscation and verbal shorthand that is designed to put a smile on your dial. Like the fashion for haircuts.
Commentators are predicting European banks that have lent money to Greece will have to ''take a haircut''. That is, they may be forced to forgive part of their debt repayments or risk Greece defaulting on its loans.
Eureka Report's Alan Kohler describes a haircut as losing part of your money but not all of it.
''It can be just a bit off the top and sides,'' he says. ''If a Greek default is averted, you could call it a close shave.
''We have all had a close shave in the turmoil and aftermath of the financial crisis. By learning to decipher financial market code we might avoid being scalped in future.''

Put a price on morals

Forget Greeks bearing gifts, now we are warned to beware of Greeks acting immorally - in the fiscal, not biblical, sense.
The European Central Bank and the puritanical Germans are prevaricating about whether they should write off Greek government debt. A bailout would allow Greece to avoid bankruptcy and the rest of Europe to avoid an even bigger debt crisis. But the ECB worries that by letting Greece off the hook, it would not have any incentive to reduce spending and get its financial house in order.
In other words, Greece would be exposed to moral hazard.
Moral hazard first became a talking point after the failure of Lehman Brothers and the run on British bank Northern Rock.
Governments in Britain, Australia and elsewhere responded with guarantees for bank deposits to restore confidence in the banking system.
But critics said this would encourage banks to continue to engage in risky lending practices and stop depositors punishing banks by withdrawing their funds.
It is interesting that moral hazard troubles the market only in times of crisis. When markets are booming, morality and the hazards of risky behaviour are the last things on people's minds.


Read more: http://www.smh.com.au/money/the-abcs-of-gfc-jargon-20111025-1mgsb.html#ixzz1cStP3N63

MF Global collapses under euro-zone bets


November 1, 2011 - 10:18AM

Jon Corzine's bid to revive his Wall Street career crashed and burned overnight when his futures brokerage MF Global Holdings Ltd filed for bankruptcy protection following bad bets on euro zone debt.
Corzine, 64, who once ran Goldman Sachs before becoming a U.S. senator and then governor of New Jersey, had been trying to turn the more than 200-year-old MF Global into a mini Goldman by taking on more risky trades.

But once regulators forced it to fully disclose the bets on debt issued by countries including Italy, Portugal and Spain, it rapidly unraveled with no buyers willing to step in.

MF Global's meltdown in less than a week made it the biggest U.S. casualty of Europe's debt crisis, and the seventh-largest bankruptcy by assets in U.S. history.

The company's shares plunged last week as its credit ratings were cut to junk. The Chapter 11 bankruptcy filing came after talks to sell a variety of assets to Interactive Brokers Group Inc broke down earlier on Monday, a person familiar with the matter said.

Regulators had expressed "grave concerns" about the viability of MF Global, which filed for bankruptcy only after "no viable alternative was available in the limited time leading up to the regulators' deadline," the company's chief operating officer, Bradley Abelow, said in a court filing.

One of the regulators that pressed MF Global, the U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission, was unhappy with the brokerage's failure to give it the required data and records. "(T)o date we don't have the information that we should have," a source close to the CFTC told Reuters.

In the end, regulators and markets reacted swiftly to MF Global's troubles, which may have been exacerbated by Corzine's affinity for risk-taking over the course of a career that took him to the top echelons of Wall Street and then into politics.

"They went for what would be a very profitable trade with European sovereign debt that obviously has blown up in their face, and brought the company down," said Dave Westhouse, vice president of Chicago retail broker PTI Securities and Futures.

RIPPLE EFFECTS

The bankruptcy is reminiscent of the collapse of Lehman Brothers in 2008 at the height of the financial crisis. But market participants said the impact from this collapse, far smaller, would likely be contained.

Still, MF Global's 2,870 employees, as well as trading counterparties, were left scrambling and confused on Monday, as MF Global halted its shares but did not file for bankruptcy until well after U.S. markets had opened.

Trading activity in U.S. gold, crude oil and grain futures slowed to a crawl as the bankruptcy forced a chaotic scramble to untangle trading positions.

"Ultimately it will have lost all confidence of its investor base," Michael Epstein, a restructuring adviser with CRG Partners, said of MF Global. "I'm not sure what restructuring it actually does. In some respects, it's a baby Lehman, in effect."

There was also uncertainty over Wall Street's exposure.

JPMorgan Chase & Co's exposure for a $1.2 billion syndicated loan to MF Global is less than $100 million, a source at the bank said. Deutsche Bank is listed in the court filing as a trustee for bondholders with $1 billion of claims. The banks declined to comment.

The impact on the markets should be smaller and nothing like when Lehman failed and hedge funds had money locked up with the firm for months, said Jeff Carter, an independent futures trader in Chicago.

At the Chicago Board of Trade, three traders wearing MF Global jackets were seen leaving prior to the opening of pit trading, and floor sources told Reuters they had been turned away after their security access cards were denied.

Back outside the Manhattan office, one MF Global employee said all he knew about the bankruptcy was what has been on TV. The company's HR department, meanwhile, was busy making calls withdrawing job offers it made in the past few weeks, according to a person familiar with the situation.

"A sale here is potentially the best outcome for employees because the company will continue to operate as opposed to slowly winding down," said Dan McElhinney, the managing director of corporate restructuring for Epiq Systems.

"I think there will be a lot of effort to tee up the sale pretty quickly here."

The New York Federal Reserve terminated MF Global as one of its primary dealers. CME Group Inc, IntercontinentalExchange Inc, Singapore Exchange Ltd and Singapore's central bank, among others, halted the broker's operations in some form except for liquidations.

European clearinghouse LCH.Clearnet declared MF Global in default.

THE ROAD TO BANKRUPTCY

Corzine was trying to transform MF Global from a brokerage that mainly places customers' trades on exchanges into an investment bank that bets with its own capital.

In the past week, the company posted a quarterly loss and its shares fell by two-thirds as investors focused on the euro zone bets and the effect of low interest rates, which hurt profits from its core brokerage operations.

MF Global scrambled through the weekend and into Monday to find buyers for all or parts of the company, while at the same time hiring restructuring and bankruptcy advisers in case nothing could be done.

In the court filing explaining what went wrong, MF Global pointed a finger at regulators. The bankruptcy was hastened by pressure from the CFTC, the Securities and Exchange Commission and the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority, wrote Abelow, the COO.

FINRA ordered that its U.S. broker-dealer unit, called MFGI, boost net capital, and then reveal a $6.3 billion stake in short-term debt from European sovereigns with "troubled economies," he wrote.

Market concerns over such exposures led to MF Global being downgraded to "junk" status by various credit rating agencies, sparking margin calls that threatened liquidity, he added.

"Concerned about the events of the past week, some of MFGI's principal regulators -- the CFTC and the SEC -- expressed their grave concerns about MFGI's viability."

MF Global in the filing did not elaborate on the regulators' concerns or the reasons behind them. The SEC, CFTC and FINRA each declined to comment.

According to a July proxy filing, Corzine would be entitled to $12.1 million in severance, prorated bonus and other benefits upon being terminated without cause. Two other executives would be entitled to more: retail operations chief Randy MacDonald could get $17.9 million, and Abelow could get $13.7 million.

However, federal bankruptcy law may limit any possible severance payouts.

First-day hearings in the case were scheduled for Tuesday at 3 p.m. in U.S. Bankruptcy Court in Manhattan. Among other things, MF Global is expected to seek permission from Judge Martin Glenn to use cash collateral to keep operating its business, court papers show.

CLOCK TICKING

By filing for bankruptcy, MF Global freezes the value of its free-falling notes and gives potential suitors a clearer picture of the losses they would be taking on, said Bill Brandt, CEO of Chicago-based turnaround firm Development Specialists Inc.

If a sale is in the offing, he added, the buyer may be a European bank or sovereign government, as such entities would be particularly keen on stopping the slide and maximizing the value of the notes.

"The real question is how many assets will be left to transfer," said Niamh Alexander, an analyst at Keefe, Bruyette & Woods. "Customers might move very quickly and it may be that every hour that passes shrinks the portfolio of assets that could be transferred" to a buyer, she said.

The bankruptcy is the latest flop for finance-focused private equity fund J.C. Flowers, whose other recent investments include nationalized German bank Hypo Real Estate.

After dividends the private equity firm has received for its preferred shares, J.C. Flowers' net exposure to MF Global is $47.8 million, according to a source familiar with the matter. The firm declined to comment.

MF Global hired boutique investment bank Evercore Partners to help find a buyer, separate sources said last week.

The broker's deeply distressed 6.25 percent notes maturing in 2016 fell 4 cents to 46 on the dollar, according to the Trace, which reports bond trades. The price had earlier fallen as low as 15 cents.

MF Global shares remained halted in New York
Reuters


Read more: http://www.smh.com.au/business/world-business/mf-global-collapses-under-eurozone-bets-20111101-1msqp.html#ixzz1cPA8MyYV


Comments:
How can things go so wrong for the professionals managing Other People's Money?



Consequences must dominate Probabilities

In making decisions under conditions of uncertainty, the consequences must dominate the probabilities. We never know the future.

The intelligent investor must focus not just on getting the analysis right. You must also ensure against loss if your analysis turns out to be wrong - as even the best analyses will be at least some of the time. 

The probability of making at least one mistake at some point in your investing lifetime is virtually 100%, and those odds are entirely out of your control. However, you do have control over the consequences of being wrong.

http://myinvestingnotes.blogspot.com/2008/10/consequences-must-dominate.html

Monday 31 October 2011

What would you do if you have a million bucks?


Monday October 31, 2011

Monday Starters - By Soo Ewe Jin

WHAT would you do if you have a million bucks? A poor government clerk from Bihar, a remote and poverty-stricken region of northern India, has become the first person to win 50 million rupees (RM3mil) on the popular Indian version of the gameshow Who Wants to be a Millionaire?
Sushil Kumar's win is a classic case of life imitating art as the script is similar to that of the 2008 Oscar-winning film Slumdog Millionaire.
According to the Associated Press, Sushil said he would spend some of his prize money to prepare for India's tough civil service examination, which could lead to a secure and prestigious lifetime job.
He would also buy a new home for his wife, pay off his parents' debts, give his brothers cash to set up small businesses and build a library in Motihari so the children of his village would have access to books and knowledge.
Real life slumdog millionaire: Sushil (left) says thank you with clasped hands as he receives his US$1mil prize from Bollywood actor Amitabh Bachchan during the fifth season of the Indian version of the Who Wants to be a Millionaire? television quiz in Mumbai on Oct 25. Kumar, a computer operator who earns just US$130 a month, has become the first person to win the top prize. — AFP
Everyone loves a story like this. Although people can become instant millionaires by striking the lottery or pulling the lever on a one-armed bandit at a casino, using one's talent at a tension-filled gameshow is more admirable.
And I applaud Sushil for his noble attitude in thinking of others to share in his newfound fortune. Bihar is one of the poorest states of India and its remoter areas, such as Motihari, have been largely untouched by India's phenomenal recent economic growth.
Do you know that there are now at least 39,000 millionaires in Malaysia? According to a recent report by the Credit Suisse Group, 19,000 new millionaires were created over the past 18 months alone.
Meanwhile, the Asia-Pacific Wealth Report 2011 by Merrill Lynch Global Wealth Management and Capgemini, also released recently, revealed that Malaysia's rich prefer splurging on a fancy new set of wheels, luxurious yachts or private jets.
Up to 46% invested their ringgit in luxury collectibles like cars, boats and jets, the highest percentage of any country within the Asia-Pacific region.
Their counterparts down south seem less interesting and still prefer jewellery and luxury watches.
I know that the CEOs who read the business section of this newspaper may consider a million ringgit small change but to most of us, it is a very faraway goal, not something one can possibly achieve as a regular salaried worker.
But we can all dream and I was wondering to myself, what would I do if I suddenly had a million ringgit in hand? I suppose our wishes would coincide very much with our age, status, and ultimately our character.
To those who believe material pursuits equate to real happiness, a shopping spree would be fantastic.
Those who do not focus too much on material things may want to travel around the world and complete their Bucket List, which may also include going on a religious pilgrimage.
I believe that God never gives us more than we can handle, just as He never lets us go through trials and tribulations beyond our capacity to endure.
And that was when I stopped dreaming. Because I know, seriously, I will never be able to handle so much money at any one time. So I shall be content and count my blessings. I hope you will too.
  • Deputy executive editor Soo Ewe Jin notes that the world's population officially hits seven billion today. No one really knows who is Citizen Seven Billion, of course, but by the time he grows up, millionaires and billionaires will probably be a dime a dozen.



  • http://biz.thestar.com.my/news/story.asp?file=/2011/10/31/business/9796922&sec=business





  • What would you do if you have a million bucks?  

    My comment:  Do absolutely nothing for the first one year.


  • Thursday 27 October 2011

    The Biggest Unknown Risk of Stock Investing


    The Biggest Unknown Risk of Stock Investing


    I have posted a Guest Blog Entry at the Invest It Wisely site called The Biggest Unknown Risk of Stock Investing.
    Juicy Excerpt: My strong sense is that most investors have not thought through carefully what it means to stick with stocks for the long run. To try to stick with stocks for the long run and fail to do so is the worst of all possible worlds. The possibility of becoming a failed Buy-and-Hold investor is the biggest unknown risk of stock investing.
    Juicy Comment #1: I agree that investors should think through these numbers. One problem is that it is extremely difficult to carry out the approach. When P/Es are high it looks like the world has changed and it is by definition following a period where it has been very easy to make money in stocks. 2000 is a perfect example.
    Juicy Comment #2: Could you please share the code for your regression analysis? I would like to replicate/critique it.
    Juicy Comment #3: I buy when the stock market is down and I buy when it is high. I tend to follow Buffet’s approach.
    Juicy Comment #4: Times of high pessimism make for great long-term returns. Times when euphoria is running high means lower future returns.
    Juicy Comment #5: So it isn’t buying and holding that you are against it is the common education piece that goes along with it?