Friday 1 May 2009

Advisers Ditch 'Buy and Hold' for New Tactics


Advisers Ditch 'Buy and Hold' for New Tactics


by Anne Tergesen and Jane J. Kim
Thursday, April 30, 2009
provided by

Facing Angry Clients, Pros Turn to 'Alternative' Products; Risk of Missing a Turnaround

The broad decline across financial markets in the past year has persuaded a small but growing number of financial advisers to abandon the traditional buy-and-hold strategy -- which emphasizes long-term investing in a mix of assets -- for a new approach geared to sidestep future market plunges and ease volatility.

Jeff Seymour, an adviser based in Cary, N.C., used to counsel clients to buy a diverse menu of stocks, bonds and commodities, and hold on for the long run. But early last year, he says, he recognized that "the macro-economic climate has changed."

Today, Mr. Seymour keeps about 90% of his clients' money in such low-risk investments as short-term bonds, cash and gold. With some of the small amount that's left over, he uses leveraged exchange-traded funds to place magnified bets both on and against the Standard & Poor's 500-stock index.

"It's a complete rethink of how to do asset management," Mr. Seymour says. Most of his clients are within a few percentage points of breaking even since the shift, he says, while his firm, Triangle Wealth Management LLC, has more than doubled in size.

Buffeted by steep declines in stocks, many bonds, commodities and real estate, many advisers are questioning their faith in long-standing investment principles, such as controlling risk by building diverse portfolios. Some are adding increasingly exotic investments, including products that offer downside protection, to client portfolios. Others are trading more actively -- and say they plan to continue to do so until they see evidence of a new bull market.

To be sure, most advisers are staying the course. They point out that frequent trading leads to higher trading costs and tax bills, and that so-called alternative investments come with some serious downsides. Because the markets for many of these products are relatively undeveloped, for example, investors may face high fees, poor liquidity and a high degree of complexity.

Critics also contend that advisers who scale back on stocks are essentially trying to time the market, and are exposing their clients to another type of risk -- that of missing out on future rallies that could recoup recent losses.

"By abandoning time-proven prudent techniques, they run a serious risk of destroying their own credibility and their clients' portfolios," says Frank Armstrong, president and founder of Investor Solutions Inc., an independent financial advisory firm in Miami that still practices buy-and-hold investing.

The changes come at a time when financial advisers are coming under pressure from clients who are tired of paying fees only to watch their savings evaporate. Advisers have "a lot of cranky clients," says Mr. Armstrong. "They want to see something happen," he says.

Certain advisers have long placed small tactical bets on sectors, countries or regions they expect to outperform the broad market. Many have also placed a small portion of clients' portfolios into alternative investments, such as commodities and real-estate investment trusts.

Offsetting Risks

Now, some are adopting even less-conventional approaches in an attempt to more effectively offset the risks of investing in stocks -- and generate returns in a market they expect to remain depressed for some time. Some have ramped up their use of opportunistic trading to try to profit from short-term rallies and selloffs. Others are turning to "structured products," which are complex investments that often employ options to provide downside protection. Still others are using investments such as currencies or managed futures that they believe will rise when stocks fall.

"Asset allocations built on stocks and bonds are best suited to secular bull markets," says Louis Stanasolovich, founder of Legend Financial Advisors Inc. in Pittsburgh. "But the past nine years have proved that nontraditional thinking makes more sense in secular bear markets."

Last October, Mr. Stanasolovich revamped one of his portfolios that is aimed at delivering relatively consistent returns with low volatility. It currently consists mainly of government and agency bonds, hedge-fund-like mutual funds and a long-short commodities fund. It also holds "managed futures" funds, which seek to profit from gains and losses in commodities and financial futures, including a range of currencies, government securities and equity indexes. From Oct. 10, when Mr. Stanasolovich completed this makeover, through April 27, he says Legend's low-volatility portfolios are "essentially break even." The S&P's 500 is off about 3% over that period.


Brave New Investing World

Some financial advisers are reconsidering their approach. Here's what to keep in mind:

• Frequent trading can lead to higher trading costs and tax bills.

• "Alternative products" often come with high fees and complex strategies.

• Market timing may help dodge declines, but investors may miss the next big turnaround.


Such unconventional approaches appear to be gaining sway. About 15% of the 500 advisers polled between December and March by consulting firms GDC Research LLC of Sherborn, Mass., and Practical Perspectives LLC of Boxford, Mass., say they have made significant changes in the way they manage retirement money over the past year. Among those who have made a change, 21% report increasing their use of opportunistic trading strategies. Eighteen percent say they have become more reliant on structured products and related investments, and 11% say they're incorporating other types of alternative investments.

Two prominent networks of financial advisers -- the National Association of Personal Financial Advisors and the Financial Planning Association -- are sponsoring panels at conferences this year on the subject of rethinking conventional approaches to investing and building client portfolios.

'A Seismic Change'

"There's a seismic change in the market," says Will Hepburn, president of the National Association of Active Investment Managers. "The people who were buy-and-hold-oriented lost a lot of money, and they don't want to do it again."

Meanwhile, financial-services companies are rolling out products designed to lure gun-shy advisers. Last July, Portfolio Management Consultants, the investment consulting arm of Envestnet Asset Management Inc., introduced seven portfolios that invest in ETFs based primarily on signals from quantitative models. Advisers -- who have invested over $200 million since the launch -- can select how much of their clients' portfolios to allocate to this tactical asset-allocation approach. Although many will put between 20% and 40% of client assets in them, some have shifted 100%, says Richard Hughes, group co-president.

Helios LLC of Orlando, Fla., expects to start offering customized portfolios this summer that will enable independent advisers to use options strategies to get exposure to riskier asset classes, such as stocks, with limited downside. In exchange, they give up some potential appreciation.

DWS Investments, the U.S. retail unit of Deutsche Bank AG's Asset Management division, says more financial advisers are using its so-called buffered notes, which offer limited principal protection. "A lot of investing over the last 40 years has been done around traditional asset classes," says Chris Warren, head of structured products at DWS. "But over the last 18 months, the correlation among those asset classes has gone up a lot, so much of the benefits of portfolio diversification really aren't there."

All these structured products add a layer of fees. Helios, for example, plans to charge a maximum fee of 0.95%.

In October, Matthew Tuttle of Tuttle Wealth Management LLC in Stamford, Conn., gave up on buy-and-hold investing. He hired Murray Ruggiero Jr. -- who developed trading systems for managed-futures traders and funds -- to develop similar computer models for the ETFs and index funds he favors. Now, Mr. Tuttle decides what to buy and sell for his clients based on market trends.

"We trust the computer," he says. He has been able to sidestep recent market slides while reducing the volatility of clients' portfolios, he says.

Paying More in Taxes

To be sure, his clients will pay more in taxes. But Mr. Tuttle says no one is complaining. "Would you rather be tax-efficient and have losses?" he says.

Other advisers are looking even further afield for alternative investments. Today, the average client of West Financial Consulting Inc. of Huntsville, Ala., holds about 20% in domestic and international stocks, down from 40% last year. Founder Larry West is currently using bond funds that make tactical bets. He is also recommending greater exposure to alternative investments, including managed-futures funds, bonds that back construction and expansion projects at churches, hedge-fund-like mutual funds, gas-drilling projects, and private partnerships that invest in real estate. He also holds positions in two private partnerships that invest in railroad cars.

There is some evidence that advisers who practice the traditional buy-and-hold philosophy are losing clients to managers trying new approaches. Jeff Porter of North Canton, Ohio, left his buy-and-hold-oriented planner last year and moved his account to Brenda Wenning of Newton, Mass. Ms. Wenning had been a financial adviser for years at a firm that practiced a buy-and-hold approach, but started actively managing clients' money -- in part by using leveraged ETFs -- when she opened her own practice in May 2008.

"I realized when I saw the market starting to change that the old buy-and-hold strategy just doesn't work," says Mr. Porter, whose account was already down 20% last year by the time he went to Ms. Wenning. She immediately shifted his investments to cash -- a move he calculates saved him about $80,000. Since then, he says, Ms. Wenning has been slowly moving back into the markets. His old adviser hadn't bought or sold a single investment in his account last year.

"You're paying these people a fee to manage your money," Mr. Porter says. "They're really not earning their keep."



Write to Anne Tergesen at anne.tergesen@wsj.com and Jane J. Kim at jane.kim@wsj.com


Pick Your Poison: Inflation, Deflation, Stagflation

Active Investing: Managing Risk

Pick Your Poison: Inflation, Deflation, Stagflation

Lauren Young
Monday, April 27, 2009
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Analysts see possible scenarios for each of these to strike the U.S. economy. Stay alert and invest accordingly.

Will the real 'flation please stand up?

Experts are arguing about where the U.S. economy is heading as the global financial system tries to right itself. Is it on the path to inflation, deflation, or, worse, stagflation? Rising unemployment and excess production capacity are making it hard for the U.S. economy to climb out of recession. And that, in turn, is putting a strain on pricing power and wage growth—raising fears of deflation, which develops when a broad decline in prices amid falling demand feeds further price-cutting.

But what happens if the Federal Reserve's efforts to jump-start the economy take effect? Stimulus to the tune of $787 billion is supposed to rev up economic engines. Prices could climb too high as too much money chases after available goods and services—the classic formula for inflation.

"I describe [the potential dangers in] this economy in the form of a snowy Minnesota road," says Peter Rekstad, a financial adviser at TruNorth in Oakdale, Minn. "A car slid off the road into the deflation ditch. The way out of the ditch is to get a bunch of friends pushing while you rock the car back and forth. The big danger is that you get out of the deflation ditch and race across the road into the inflation ditch."

Or to take Rekstad's analogy further, say a car is straddling the road, with its wheels mired in both ditches at once—the worst of both worlds. That situation, where growth slows while inflation soars, is known as stagflation.

Here's an investor's guide to protecting your portfolio from these three forces.

Deflation

Deflation is the threat dominating headlines. "You've got a strong supply of goods and weak demand. That's a recipe for prolonged deflation," says A. Gary Shilling, economist and author of Deflation: How to Survive & Thrive in the Coming Wave of Deflation (McGraw-Hill). The problem is deflation's ripple effect: When banks stop lending, businesses stop expanding and wages fall. Consumers stop spending, which pushes prices lower. Why won't massive stimulus pull the economy out of the deflationary lane? Shilling fears that the U.S. government's economic tampering will have a "Big Brother effect," hurting innovation and permanently curbing growth.

The Signs. The surest sign of deflation is a decline in the consumer price index, which tracks the prices of consumer goods and services. But it's hard to ignore lower real estate values, which aren't in the CPI. Home prices fell more than 18% in 2008, according to the S&P/Case-Schiller U.S. National Home Price Index. Another deflation indicator: the higher savings rate, which we're seeing for the first time in 25 years. Shilling expects the savings rate to rise from 4.2% to 10% in the next decade.

Investment Strategy. "Quality is paramount in deflationary markets," Shilling says. He thinks most investors should be in short-term certificates of deposit or money-market funds. Those with a 10-year time horizon should also buy tech stocks, such as semiconductors, he says. Companies facing deflation can't cut prices and must boost productivity through technology.

Inflation

The Argument. Many of the economists and financial advisers polled by BusinessWeek for this story believe the huge amount of money being pumped into banks by the Federal Reserve (chart, right) makes inflation a real threat. Hans Olsen, chief investment officer for JPMorgan Chase (JPM)'s private wealth management business, says the stimulus plan ultimately will lead to higher inflation. However, total inflation is basically nonexistent at -0.4%. The trick is figuring out when it will be a problem. "The nasty thing about inflation is that it's insidious," Olsen says. Banishing inflation from the economy once it is "infected" is hard.

The Signs. The leading indicator used to measure inflation is the CPI.

Commodity prices, particularly those of oil and copper, are another bellwether. One indicator Olsen tracks is government debt as a percentage of gross domestic product, which he sees surging from 40% to 80% over the next few years.

Investment Strategy. Mild price inflation is considered healthy for stock investors because it is a sign that the economy is growing. But when inflation spikes, as it did when it hit 13% in the 1970s, interest rates rise and borrowing stops. For bondholders, soaring inflation eats away at asset values over extended periods.

The most direct way to fight this is to buy Treasury Inflation-Protected Securities (TIPS)—government-backed bonds pegged to inflation via the CPI. (TIPS belong in tax-deferred accounts because they are not tax-efficient.) A study by economic consultancy Peter L. Bernstein Inc. found that, for an aggressive investor who is worried about inflation, a 47%/53% proportion of TIPs to stocks (the study tracked broad stock market indexes) provided the best risk-adjusted real returns over a wide range of inflationary environments.

Among mutual funds, advisers favor the Vanguard Inflation-Protected Securities Fund (VIPSX), which had an annualized return of 5% for the past three years. Other plays include the iShares Barclays TIPS Bond exchange-traded fund (TIP) and Pimco Real Return Fund (PRTNX).

Commodities are another classic hedge. A well-diversified commodity play is the Pimco Commodity Real Return Fund (CRIX), which combines commodities with TIPS. Many advisers also like the SPDR Gold Trust ETF (GLD) and the First Eagle Gold Fund.

Stagflation

Stagflation is caused by the combination of slow growth and surging inflation. Slower growth will come from extreme caution by lenders, households, and businesses, while a shortage of production capacity will create inflationary bottlenecks, argues Mohamed El-Erian, chief executive officer at Pimco. "Stagflation will be part of the new normal," he says.

The Signs. The misery index, which combines the unemployment and inflation rates, is the best gauge of stagflation. In March it was at 8.1%. El-Erian predicts that unemployment will hit 10% by yearend, and 2% inflation could bring the misery index up to 12% by the end of 2010.

Investment Strategy. Insulating your portfolio from stagflation is tough. Equity investors need to take a very conservative stance, focusing on high-quality growth stocks such as Johnson & Johnson (JNJ) and PepsiCo (PEP), says John Boland, financial adviser at Maple Capital Management. Gold, as well as TIPS, will help mitigate some of the inflation risk. El-Erian considers TIPS a bargain because 10-year TIPS are pricing in inflation of less than 1.5% for the next decade, and he sees inflation jumping as high as 6% by 2011.

Young is a Personal Business editor for BusinessWeek

With Tara Kalwarski in New York

http://finance.yahoo.com/special-edition/active-investor/inflate-deflate-stagflate;_ylt=Apx_JUcYDM.BiqB1peaegXC7YWsA

Active Investing: Managing Risk
http://finance.yahoo.com/special-edition/active-investor;_ylt=Av0dbBsyTSeandibSloqvq67YWsA

Financial Planning for the Future

Financial Planning for the Future
http://www.usnews.com/features/business/financial-planning-for-the-future.html

Why Chrysler Still Might Not Survive

U.S.News & World Report
Why Chrysler Still Might Not Survive
Thursday April 30, 3:31 pm ET

By Rick Newman



Give President Obama credit for his boldest bailout plan yet. Unlike some of the open-ended bank bailouts, his Chrysler plan makes hard choices, sets public standards and deadlines, and puts some burden on stakeholders besides the U.S. government. By forcing Chrysler into bankruptcy, Obama has committed to a process that will determine winners and losers and force concessions on those unwilling to make them voluntarily.

But Obama's claim that bankruptcy gives Chrysler a "new lease on life" may be wishful thinking. Bankruptcy reorganization and a Fiat merger might be Chrysler's best chance for survival, but the "New Chrysler," as the administration calls it, could end up being no more successful than New Coke, one of the biggest business flops ever. Here's why:

No cars.
Obama praised Chrysler's accomplishments in cutting tough deals with its unions and most of its creditors. But it takes compelling cars to succeed in the car industry, and Chrysler still has few. The Fiat merger is supposed to give Chrysler new versions of some popular Fiat vehicles, like the 500 compact car. Okay, great. But unless Obama takes the unusual step of waiving U.S. safety and environmental laws, it will take well over a year for such cars to be retrofitted for the U.S. market - and even longer before they're actually built here, which is one of the conditions the new company must meet to get up to $8 billion in additional aid. For the next 12 months at least, Chrysler will still be offering the same lineup of inefficient, underperforming vehicles, and losing market share the whole time.

Small margins.
The last two years have proven that every successful automaker needs a stable of competitive small cars - one of Fiat's strengths - but those are just part of the formula. Small cars tend to have small profit margins, no matter how many you sell, which is why it's vital to have compelling larger vehicles, too. Chrysler's 300 sedan was a big hit, but it's near the end of its lifecycle, and few of Chrysler's other big vehicles are tops in their segment. When the car market was going gangbusters, a few hits in the lineup could make up for a few duds. But with industry sales down 40 percent from their peak, every vehicle needs to pull its own weight, and even a combined Chrysler-Fiat fleet doesn't seem to have enough standouts.

Lots of competition.
The revitalized Chrysler is hardly the only company planning to introduce hot new small cars that will take the market by storm. Chevrolet has the Cruze. Ford has the Fiesta. Toyota, Honda and Nissan already build some of the best small cars, and they're certainly not planning to give up their huge edge in the segment. So even if the 500 and a couple other Fiats are big hits when they arrive in America, the competition is only going to intensify. And other makes already in the market have a key first-mover advantage.

Convoluted ownership.
If the Obama plan goes as expected, Chrsyler will emerge from bankruptcy being jointly owned by the United Auto Workers, Fiat, and the U.S. and Canadian governments. Those vastly different entities share a common cause for the moment - saving a big North American employer and using its infrastructure as a springboard for Fiat. But it's hard to imagine a more awkward ownership structure for something as complex as a car company. The U.S. government and the UAW? The U.S. government and the Italians? Will they really maintain a unified focus for as long as it takes for Chrysler to repay up to $12 billion in federal loans and get out of the government's clutches? Chrysler's failed 9-year marriage to Germany's Daimler AG is a poignant reminder of how difficult it can be to hold together a sprawling operation when the biggest stakeholders have diverging interests.

Ford.
There's one domestic automaker positioned to benefit from the woes at Chrysler and General Motors. Ford is still nursing its own string of deep losses -- but doing so without government aid or the stigma associated with bankruptcy. And as it turns around its own operation, Ford has started to slowly gain market share, largely at the expense of its crosstown rivals. Ford could make further gains as Chrysler works through bankruptcy, and GM approaches it. Obama has pledged government backing for the warranties on all Chrysler and GM products, but buying from a solvent automaker still beats taking your chances on a fuzzy government guarantee. That's old-fashioned capitalism, which may yet play a role in the historic realignment of the automakers.

http://biz.yahoo.com/usnews/090430/30_why_chrysler_still_might_not_survive.html;_ylt=Ak4I9f5eS163H2qBgdj9syy7YWsA?.&.pf=loans

Making A Winning Long-Term Stock Pick

Investopedia
Making A Winning Long-Term Stock Pick
Wednesday April 29, 11:33 am ET

Chris Seabury



Many investors are confused when it comes to the stock market; they have trouble figuring out which stocks are good long-term buys and which ones aren't. To invest for the long term, not only do you have to look at certain indicators, but you also have to remain focused on your long-term goals, be disciplined and understand your overall investment objectives. In this article, we tell you how to identify good long-term buys and what's needed to find them.

Focusing on the Fundamentals
There are many fundamental factors that analysts inspect to decide which stocks are good long-term buys and which are not. These factors tell you whether the company is financially healthy and whether the stock has been brought down to levels below its actual value, thus making it a good buy. The following are several strategies that you can use to determine a stock's value.

Consider Dividend Consistency
The consistency of a company's ability to pay and raise its dividend shows that it has predictability in its earnings and that it's financially stable enough to pay that dividend - the dividend comes from current or retained earnings.
You'll find many different opinions on how many years you should go back to look for this consistency - some say five years, others say as many as 20 - but anywhere in this range will give you an overall idea of the dividend consistency.

Examine P/E Ratio
The price-earnings ratio (P/E) ratio is used to determine whether a stock is over- or undervalued.
It's calculated by dividing the current price of the stock by the company's earnings per share (EPS). The higher the P/E ratio, the more willing some investors are to pay for those earnings. However, a higher P/E ratio is also seen as a sign that the stock is overpriced and could be due for a pullback - at the very least. A lower P/E ratio could indicate that the stock is an attractive value and that the markets have pushed shares below their actual value.

A practical way to determine whether a company is cheap relative to its industry or the markets is to compare its P/E ratio with the overall industry or market. For example, if the company has a P/E ratio of nine while the industry has a P/E ratio of 14, this would indicate that the stock is a great valuation compared with the overall industry.

Watch Fluctuating Earnings
The economy moves in cycles. Sometimes the economy is strong and earnings rise; other times, the economy is slowing and earnings fall. One way to determine whether a stock is a good long-term buy is to evaluate its past earnings and future earnings projections. If the company has a consistent history of rising earnings over a period of many years, it could be a good long-term buy.

Also, look at what the company's earnings projections are going forward. If they're projected to remain strong, this could be a sign that the company may be a good long-term buy. Alternatively, if the company is cutting future earnings guidance, this could be a sign of earnings weakness and you might want to stay away.

Avoid Valuation Traps
How do you know if a stock is a good long-term buy and not a valuation trap (the stock looks cheap but can head a lot lower)? To answer this question, you need to apply some common-sense principles, such as looking at the company's debt ratio and current ratio. Debt can work in two ways:

During times of economic uncertainty or rising interest rates, companies with high levels of debt can experience financial problems.

In good economic times, debt can increase a company's profitability by financing growth at a lower cost.


The debt ratio measures the amount of assets that have been financed with debt. It's calculated by dividing the company's total liabilities by its total assets. Generally,the higher the debt, the greater the possibility that the company could be a valuation trap.

But there is another tool you can use to determine the company's ability to meet these debt obligations: the current ratio. To calculate this number, you divide the company's current assets by its current liabilities. The higher the number, the more liquid is the company. For example, let's say a company has a current ratio of four. This means that the company is liquid enough to pay four times its liabilities.

By using these two ratios - the debt ratio and the current ratio - you can get a good idea as to whether the stock is a good value at its current price.

Economic Indicators
There are two ways that you can use economic indicators to understand what's happening with the markets.

Understanding Economic Conditions
The major stock market averages are considered to be forward-looking economic indicators. For example, consistent weakness in the Dow Jones Industrial Average could signify that the economy has started to top out and that earnings are starting to fall. The same thing applies if the major market averages start to rise consistently but the economic numbers are showing that the economy is still weak. As a general rule, stock prices tend to lead the actual economy in the range of six to 12 months. A good example of this is the U.S. stock market crash in 1929, which eventually led to the Great Depression.

Understand the Economic Big Picture
A good way to gauge how long-term buys relate to the economy is to use the news headlines as an economic indicator. Basically, you're using contrarian indicators from the news media to understand whether the markets are becoming overbought or oversold. A good example of this occurred in 1974, when Newsweek had a bear on the cover showing the pillars of Wall Street being knocked down. Looking back, this was clearly a sign that the markets had bottomed and stocks were relatively cheap.

In contrast, a Time magazine cover from September 27, 1999, included the phrase, "Get rich dot com" - a clear sign of troubles down the road for the markets and dotcom stocks. What this kind of thinking shows is that many people feel secure when they're in the mainstream. They reinforce these beliefs by what they hear and read in the mainstream press. This can be a sign of excessive optimism or pessimism. However, these kinds of indicators can take a year or more to become reality.

Conclusion
Investing for the long term requires patience and discipline. You may spot good long-term investments when the company or the markets haven't been performing so well. By using fundamental tools and economic indicators, you can find those hidden diamonds in the rough and avoid the potential valuation traps.

Chrysler driven into bankruptcy

Chrysler driven into bankruptcy

Chrysler became the first major car manufacturer to file for bankruptcy in the current recession after last-minute negotiations between the US government and a batch of dissident hedge fund creditors broke down.

By James Quinn, Wall Street Correspondent
Last Updated: 9:20PM BST 30 Apr 2009

But, at the same time, Chrysler entered into a strategic partnership with Italian rival Fiat designed to safeguard its long-term future and give it access to fuel-efficient technologies and smaller car designs.

Related Articles
Chrysler holdouts should keep fighting Obama’s cramdown
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Chrysler deal may see $4.9bn debt write-off
US car makers: the rocky road to bankruptcy

The developments – which followed months of negotiations by Barack Obama’s automotive task force – herald a new chapter in the 84-year-old company’s history. A chapter which will ultimately see it controlled by Fiat and the United Auto Workers (UAW) union.

The collapse followed an 11th-hour stand-off between the US automotive task force and 20 hedge and distressed debt funds which control $1bn (£676m) of Chrysler’s $6.9bn debt. The funds refused to accept a deal which would have seen them paid only 44pc of what they are owed.

The dissident funds, including Oppenheimer Funds and Perella Weinberg’s Xerion Capital Fund, stood firm after alleging they were being unfairly treated in favour of government funded banks such as JP Morgan Chase and Goldman Sachs, who are among Chrysler’s biggest creditors.

President Obama reprimanded the hedge funds, saying he could not support “a group who held out for the prospect of an unjustified taxpayer bailout”. He added that some “demanded returns twice what others were getting”. The attack was a negative moment in an otherwise highly positive statement, in which he called Chrysler one of the companies that “helped make the 20th century the American century”.

The car maker has been given a “new lease on life” as a result of the deal with Fiat, the President said. He added that the company’s move into Chapter 11 will be “quick ... efficient ... and controlled” and “will not disrupt the lives of those who work at Chrysler.”

The alliance with Fiat will safeguard 30,000 jobs at Chrysler, tens of thousands at suppliers and dealers, and guarantee the healthcare rights of 170,000 retired Chrysler workers and their families.

Chrysler was last night due to file for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection in New York, a process which will allow a bankruptcy judge to approve its restructuring plan, which has the support of employees, unions, and 70pc of creditors by value.

Obama administration officials described the bankruptcy process as “purely surgical”, saying it would take 30-60 days for the new Chrysler to re-emerge.

Filing for bankruptcy will allow Chrysler to access $3.3bn in new debtor-in-possession financing from the US government, intended to ensure it can operate as normal through the process, as well as $4.7bn in US loans on exiting Chapter 11, on top of $4bn already loaned back in December. The Canadian and Ontario governments will provide a further $2.42bn.

In return, on formation of the new Chrysler, the US government will own an 8pc stake — and its Canadian counterparts a 2pc stake — and will be able to nominate five directors between them.
Fiat will get a 20pc stake in the new company to begin with, but President Obama stressed the Italian company will not be allowed to take a majority stake until “every taxpayer dime” has been repaid. UAW, will have a 55pc stake.

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/newsbysector/transport/5252690/Chrysler-driven-into-bankruptcy.html

FTSE recovery or a sucker's rally?

FTSE recovery or a sucker's rally?

The Daily Telegraph asks some of the City's leading experts if the FTSE bounce signals a market turn.

By Jonathan Sibun
Last Updated: 12:38PM GMT 16 Mar 2009

The FTSE-100 rose an impressive 6.3pc last week and market participants are openly questioning whether markets have reached their lows for the first time since the financial crisis began.

After weeks of gloom the scale of the surge – with the FTSE up 223 points at 3753.7, the biggest full-week rise this year – took many by surprise.

The Daily Telegraph talks to some of the City's leading experts to ask whether it is time to turn back to equities.

Anthony Bolton

Fidelity International

All of the things I look for to be in place for a market bottom were in place last week, so I think there is a reasonable chance that we have reached a bottom. A new bull market could have started.

There are three things I have looked for.

The first is the pattern of bull and bear markets. In the US, the S&P index is down 57pc from peak to trough. That is the deepest bear market but one since the early 1900s. The exception was in the 1930s but that came after huge overvaluations in the 1920s.

The second is sentiment. You would have to go back to the 1970s to see when sentiment was last this bad.

And the third is that some valuations are now compelling. There are a lot of stocks out there that are undervalued.

I don't tend to focus on the economic outlook. If you focus solely on the economy you won't see it [the bottom]. You won't see a flashing green light. By the time you see the economic indicators the equity markets will already have moved.

Edward Bonham Carter

Jupiter Asset Management

If you are asking whether this is a reasonable time to be increasing equity exposure on a three-to-five year view then the answer is yes.

However, while investors are starting to be paid to take equity risk that doesn't mean we've reached the bottom. The lesson in history is that very few people can call the bottom.

This year is likely to remain schizophrenic. You will have periods of people thinking they can see the bottom and the effects of the actions taken by governments and then periods where people believe that the economy will remain in difficulty for some time.

It is possible we could fall through the 3,000 mark but a lot of people are trying to predict the unpredictable. In bear markets, rallies are the order of the day.

Between 1966 and 1982 markets traded in a broadly sideways pattern in a range of 300 to 400 points. It is highly possible we could see that again.

Paul Kavanagh

Killick & Co

The market was due a rally. I wouldn't call it a sucker's rally but neither would I call it the bottom. I can see us getting above 4,000 but I still believe there is a long way to go before we've bottomed out. We're looking at another year of working through this.

There is sentiment around job losses which has yet to feed through. Unemployment is a lagging indicator but it will hurt sentiment if 100,000 jobs are cut a month to Christmas. Consumer spending has yet to drop off a cliff but if unemployment reaches three million there will be an impact.

Tim Steer

New Star Asset Management

We may be reaching the bottom. One justification for saying that would be that much of the refinancing that companies are going to have to do is priced into the market. The market discounts what is going to happen and it is very easy to see which companies are in need of financing and which are not.

We have already seen some companies do well from that. In a few cases companies' share prices are going up in anticipation of a rights issue. The view is that while earnings will be diluted, there will be less of a debt problem.

Garry White

Questor Editor

A market bottoms when we reach what is known as the "point of maximum pessimism". This means that investors have lost so much money they completely throw in the towel - and shares correct to an undervalued level. I don't believe we are at this level yet.

The FTSE 100 is now trading on a price-earnings multiple approaching 16 – with many more earnings downgrades likely to follow the reporting season. Some analysts believe earnings at non-financial companies may slump 24pc in 2009, this means the "real" prospective multiple of the index is much, much higher. This rally has all the marks of a bear market rally and investors should beware.

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/financetopics/financialcrisis/5252775/FTSEs-11-week-high-sparks-hope-that-bull-market-may-be-arriving.html

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FTSE's 11-week high sparks hope that bull market may be arriving

FTSE's 11-week high sparks hope that bull market may be arriving

Hopes that the bear market in equities is over were buoyed as shares rose and more analysts speculated we could be in the early stages of a bull market.

By Edmund Conway
Last Updated: 9:27PM BST 30 Apr 2009

The benchmark FTSE 100 index rose by 1.3pc, capping its biggest monthly increase since 2003. The market's buoyancy comes with many experts claiming that the worst of the financial crisis and market slides are now over. The FTSE dropped by more than 31pc in 2008, but has now risen back to an 11-week high of 4,243.71, despite the spread of swine flu and warnings from the International Monetary Fund that the crisis is not even half-way over.

Analysts hailed the fact that the index increased by 8.1pc this month, with a strong performance from the banking sector yesterday.

Disappointing news is just being ignored, good news is being jumped on as an excuse to get involved," said David Morrison, market strategist at GFT Global Market.

Meanwhile, Anthony Bolton, the renowned fund manager and president of investments at Fidelity International, said a bull market may have begun in March.

"All the things are in place for the bear market to have ended," he said. "When there's a strong consensus, a very negative one, and cash positions are very high, as they are at the moment, I'd like to bet against that."

A report by Barclays Wealth said the likelihood is that the world economy has avoided depression and would escape with a milder recession. Aaron Girwitz, head of global investment strategy, said: "We suggest beginning to add more risk to portfolios, and look to Asia to lead the economic revival. Credit markets will outperform as risk appetite increases.

"But we remain somewhat cautious. Market volatility will ease back only gradually. We are not urging investors to increase equity allocations to levels above their strategic norms".

However, others have warned that with many banks still needing extra capital, the crisis and the associated bear market may have longer to run.

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/financetopics/financialcrisis/5252775/FTSEs-11-week-high-sparks-hope-that-bull-market-may-be-arriving.html

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Markets infected by confidence pandemic

Markets infected by confidence pandemic

Imagine if swine flu had broken out on March 9. A health emergency would probably have thrown stock markets - then touching 10-year lows - into an absolute rout. But less than two months later, investors don't seem to care.

By Edward Hadas, breakingviews.com
Last Updated: 4:14PM BST 30 Apr 2009

The Dow Jones Stoxx 600 European index hit a 2009 high on Thursday. That followed Wednesday's rise in the yield on 10-year US Treasury bonds above 3pc. Investors won't cough up for risk-free assets, but will take commodities and emerging markets exposure in big doses. It's a kind of flight from safety.

Clouds become mere appendages to big silver linings. Investors overlooked worse-than-expected US GDP figures, focusing instead on the need to rebuild inventories. They rejoiced in a slowdown in the contraction of eurozone bank lending, without recoiling at the contraction itself. Even the likely bankruptcy of Chrysler has found a positive spin: uncertainty is lifted.


As for unequivocally bad news - a huge increase in eurozone unemployment, confirmation that UK house prices are still falling - it is simply ignored.

Investors seem to be on a mood-enhancing drug. And in a sense they are.

Governments and central banks have been issuing vast quantities of a stimulant that gets investors and markets high - cheap money. Some of the liquidity created by near-zero official interest rates, effectively unlimited financing for banks and gargantuan fiscal deficits is almost certainly leaking into financial markets.

Investors, like policymakers, are betting that the optimism will prove self-fulfilling. Confidence makes consumers and companies more likely to spend and invest. Also, the liquidity should ease the financial squeeze, increasing the supply of credit for trade and inventories.

The cure is working so well that it's tempting to believe the monetary floodgates should remain open forever. But there's a reason why these policies are exceptional. They are likely to have adverse side effects - too high inflation if money stays too cheap for too long, or another squeeze if interest and tax rates rise too quickly.

The money drug is still in trials. What's more, it may do little to combat the underlying disease of globally unbalanced production and consumption. A long and painful recession would do that. And markets may yet follow the economy rather than the money.

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/breakingviewscom/5251575/Markets-infected-by-confidence-pandemic.html

Swine flu: 'There are two weeks where it could go either way'

Swine flu: 'There are two weeks where it could go either way'
As the scientific community admits the world is overdue for a pandemic, will the outbreak of swine flu find Britain prepared, asks Neil Tweedie.

by Neil Tweedie
Last Updated: 1:30PM BST 28 Apr 2009

Comments 21 Comment on this article

Swine flu is a variant of the H1N1 strain which causes seasonal outbreaks among humans Photo: Getty
Buy shares in pharmaceuticals, sell airlines and travel operators – well, at least for the next one or two weeks. It will take about a fortnight for the threat presented by swine flu to become clear – the scaremongers can scare away to their hearts' content for the next few days but neither they nor anyone else knows if the outbreak in Mexico City represents the beginning of a global influenza pandemic.

"Flu is like fire," says Angela McLean, director of the Institute for Emerging Infections at Oxford University. "You have an outbreak and it spits out sparks. You then have to wait to see whether the sparks die out or start new fires."

Nearly 150 people in Mexico are thought to have died after contracting a new version of the flu virus, and yesterday two cases were confirmed in Scotland, as another 22 remained under observation in the UK. There are other confirmed cases in the United States, Canada and Spain; and suspected cases in New Zealand, Israel and Colombia. Meanwhile, the Russians banned imports of US and Latin American pork (for no good reason).

The version in question is a variant of the H1N1 strain responsible for seasonal outbreaks in humans but containing genetic ingredients from strains that normally affect birds and pigs. It is virtually certain that the new variant can be transmitted between humans – otherwise all those infected would have to have been in contact with pigs. Currently, that makes it more of a threat than the avian flu strain H5N1, which has killed scores of people in South-East Asia. Although H5N1 may one day mutate into a human-to-human strain, it has not yet done so – all those who died worked closely with birds.

Influenza is the most adaptable of viruses, constantly evolving to outwit human attempts to combat it. There were three flu pandemics in the 20th century: the "Spanish influenza" outbreak of 1918, which some scientists think may have evolved from swine flu and killed between 40 and 50 million people worldwide; the Asian influenza pandemic of 1957; and the Hong Kong outbreak of 1968. Between them, these may have been responsible for four million deaths. Received opinion has it that the world is overdue another one. So what could the Mexican outbreak mean for Britain?

The doctors, scientists and civil servants responsible for managing an outbreak have a problem: they can raise the alarm now and be accused of over-reacting if Mexican flu remains just that; or they can wait and be accused of under-reacting when the British economy, already in intensive care, goes into cardiac arrest as hundreds of thousands of workers take to their beds.

According to a Cabinet Office briefing paper, a flu pandemic could reach the UK within two to four weeks of an outbreak. Once here, the virus would spread to all major population centres within one or two weeks. Peak infection would occur seven weeks after its arrival.

The department states: "Depending upon the virulence of the influenza virus, the susceptibility of the population and the effectiveness of counter-measures, up to half the population could have developed the illness and between 50,000 and 750,000 additional deaths could have occurred by the end of the pandemic in the UK."

The latter is presumably based on the apocalyptic assumption that half the UK population of 61 million contracts flu and then suffers the 2.5 per cent mortality rate seen in 1918. This compares to mortality rates of 0.5 per cent in 1957 and 1968. Nevertheless, a flu pandemic could induce economic dislocation in the United Kingdom on a crippling scale, and the jitters have already begun.

The travel industry copped it first, with shares in airlines plunging and stocks in cruise lines sinking. Shares in British Airways, Carnival Cruise Lines, Intercontinental Hotels and Thomas Cook all headed south as the European Union commissioner for health advised against all but essential travel to affected areas of Mexico and the United States. That announcement was bound to drown out President Obama's expression yesterday of "concern rather than alarm" over the outbreak. The share movements could not be justified by available evidence, but then, when did that stop the speculators?

In an assessment of 2005, the World Bank warned that a pandemic could cause a loss of 2 per cent in global GDP over the course of a year, due to reduced productivity through absenteeism. Tourism and the restaurant and hotel sectors would be hit severely as people sought to stay away from each other, while health services would be overwhelmed by those seeking help. The Department of Health believes a flu pandemic would cost Britain up to £7 billion in lost GDP if a quarter of employees were affected, and double that if half went on sick leave at some point – a more likely figure. Hospitals and surgeries would be swamped: pneumonia cases could easily outstrip the 110,000 acute and 1,800 intensive beds available in England and Wales.

A specialist in acute medicine based in London told The Telegraph that he had made preliminary plans to quarantine himself from his wife and three children if the flu outbreak proves to be serious and he is treating patients.

Some 12,000 people die from influenza in England and Wales each year but because the overwhelming majority are elderly that fact tends to escape the general population. The outbreak of 1918 differed from the norm in that young adults and those in early middle age, the 25-40 age group, died in the greatest numbers. The theory is that their strong immune systems over-reacted to the flu strain with fatal results. Post-mortem examinations uncovered severe haemorrhages in lungs unlike anything seen before. Some 230,000 people in Britain are believed to have succumbed to the flu pandemic, a painful toll given the three quarters of a million claimed by the First World War.

"Even in an outbreak involving low mortality, there could be real problems in maintaining services," says Prof McLean. "Schools could close for extended periods, for example. Then there is the "milk in Tesco" question. The just-in-time ordering system of supermarkets may have made us more vulnerable to stoppages through illness. I heard one figure suggesting there are eight hours worth of milk in London at any one time."

The good news is that Britain is one of the best-prepared nations with regard to stocks of the anti-influenza drugs Tamiflu and Relenza, which would supply some protection against a new strain. And, of course, the Mexican outbreak could go the way of Sars and bird flu, viral outbreaks which claimed lives at an alarming rate initially but then failed to spread.

When swine flu broke out at a US army base in 1976, predictions of a cataclysm accompanied it. F David Mathews, the US health secretary, warned: "The indication is that we will see a return of the 1918 flu virus – that is the most virulent form of the flu. The predictions are that this virus will kill one million Americans in 1976.''

Thankfully, he was wrong. Only one person died and the outbreak spontaneously ceased.

"There is a difference between being able to transfer between one human being and another, and being able to do it efficiently," cautions Professor McLean. "This strain may not be very infectious. What matters is how much virus these people are shedding and for how long – for how long are they coughing and sneezing."

"We can't know for weeks what proportion of people catch it and what proportion die from it. This might turn out to be nothing – outside Mexico."

Even if the Mexican strain spreads to the UK, people are fitter and better fed than they were in 1918. And antibiotics mean the secondary infections that often kill flu sufferers can be seen off. Still, Prof McLean believes caution is the best policy.

"You could say that it is better to over-react and then retreat. Eating humble pie at a later date is preferable to reacting too slowly and too late because outbreaks are easier to control early on."

Even in 1918, when transport was slower and scarcer, Spanish flu managed to spread around the world, reaching – and devastating – the remotest Inuit villages in five months. The jumbo jet and the era of mass travel has made influenza's task much easier.

"If this is a pandemic, we should begin to see these newly seeded epidemics growing in different countries in one or two weeks," says Prof McLean.

"Are we overdue for one? I think I would agree that we are. It's been an awfully long time.

"These are the two weeks where it really could go either way. It's a question of watch this space."


http://www.telegraph.co.uk/comment/5232571/There-are-two-weeks-where-it-could-go-either-way.html



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Swine flu: how will shares react?

Swine flu: how will shares react?
As fears grew over the economic impact of a flu pandemic, shares initially tumbled, with travel and airline companies bearing the brunt of the losses.

By Emma Simon
Last Updated: 4:13PM BST 30 Apr 2009

Fears that the swine flu outbreak could cause further stock market shocks around the globe have proved largely unfounded, although certain shares and funds have fallen in value on the back of this latest health concern.

As fears grew over the economic impact of a flu pandemic, shares initially tumbled on Monday, with travel and airline companies bearing the brunt of the losses.

But later in the week stock markets stabilised, although there was little positive news for those companies operating in the travel and tourism sectors. By Wednesday, British Airways, which was the hardest hit in a general sell-off of airline stocks in London, fell 7.7pc.

Others shares badly affected included Carnival, the Caribbean cruise operator, which saw its share price fall by almost 7pc at one point and Thomas Cook and InterContinental, both of whom saw share prices dive by more than 4pc midweek.

But while investors were nervous about the effect that swine flu could have on these travel firms, many were buying up pharmaceutical companies on the expectation that Government's would be forced to stockpile expensive viral treatments and flu vaccinations.

Two of the biggest beneficiaries were GlaxoSmithKline, which makes flu vaccine Relenz, and Roche which manufactures the drug Tamiflu – which has been proven to be an effective treatment against both avian and the new swine flu.

Market experts said that despite the economic turmoil, stock market were not overreacting to this latest scare. (Why?)

Anthony Grech, market strategist at IG Index, said: "After weathering the likes of SARS and bird flu in recent years, there seems to be an element of wait-and-see among traders."

During the Asian bird flu outbreaks in 2005 and 2006, airline, hotel groups, insurers and oil companies stocks fell heavily, while shares in drug, health care and cleaning product businesses soared.

"I think there will be a little bit of a lift for pharmaceuticals, but this may not follow through unless the situation gets out of hand," said Paul Kavanagh of stockbroker Killik & Co. "Governments will be looking at vaccines, but it's come at a bad time for the world economy and could be very expensive."

For investors that hold Isas, unit trusts and other investment funds, this latest market turbulence may be fraying already taut nerves. But financial advisers have pointed out that the volatility this week should be put into perspective.

Adrian Lowcock, the senior investment adviser at Bestinvest said: "Stock market has a nervous day on Tuesday following the spread of swine flue, but have bounced back as concerns ease. Unless this develops into something much more prevalent we don't expect to see any further impact. The volatile is insignificant when compared to recent events."

He points out that the road to recovery will be bumpy - but this latest jolt does not seem to have derailed the slight market improvements seen over the past month.

The focus on swine flu, may be focusing people's attention on pharmaceutical companies and biotech and healthcare funds. The former invest solely in companies involved in developing new drug treatments and therapies.

The latter have a broader remit, also investing in other health care related companies, such as the large pharmaceutical giants, and companies such as Smith & Nephew that manufacture medical equipment - be it surgical instruments or face masks.

Over the past 12 months, these funds have delivered reasonable returns for investors: Framlington's biotech fund is up 20pc, while Franklin Templeton's biotech fund is up 21pc.

The health care funds have produced more modest returns (Schroders Medical Discovery is up 3.5pc, while Framlington's Health care is up just 0.6pc) but given the wider market falls, anyone invested in one of these funds is no doubt delighted with positive returns.

However, Mark Dampier, of Hargreaves Lansdown says: "Up until a year ago the performance of these funds has been awful." He adds that investors should remember that these are high risk funds, where returns can be volatile. Many are largely invested in US-listed companies, so currency movements can affect returns.



http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/personalfinance/investing/5246672/Swine-flu-how-will-shares-react.html



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Thursday 30 April 2009

Recognizing Value Situations - Growth at a Reasonable Price (GARP)

Recognizing Value Situations - Growth at a Reasonable Price (GARP)


GARP is the mainstream scenario of reasonable market valuation - or undervaluation - of growth potential. Solid and improving fundamentals and supporting intangibles are key. As part of the assessment the value investor must ask how realistic are the growth projections, particularly over time, and whether the company takes a balanced approach to the business and fundamentals. In short, is the business a good business, capable of sustained growth, and selling at a reasonable price? Key words not to lose sight of are good, sustained, and reasonable.


Or is the business a bet on an extreme but temporary success in short-term margins, market share, revenue, or profit? The G in GARP must be sustainable, not based on a short-term blip, fad, acquisition, or worse, a wild hope. The business model and its perception in the marketplace must be solid and on the rise.


Stocks with a PEG ratio of 2 or less with other solid fudamentals are good candidates, but "GARP" is not a matter of ratios alone.


Select companies with solid fundamentals and strong growth prospects based on various factors to analyse, but beware the growth maybe far from a sure thing.

Also read:
Recognizing Value Situations
Recognizing Value Situations - Growth at a Reasonable Price
Recognizing Value Situations - The Fire Sale
Recognizing Value Situations - The Asset Play
Recognizing Value Situations - Growth Kickers
Recognizing Value Situations - Turning the Ship Around
Recognizing Value Situations - Cyclical Plays
Recognizing Value Situations - Smoke and Mirrors

Recognizing Value Situations

Recognizing Value Situations

Value comes wrapped in many different packages. The common is the growth case through normal business results, where solid and improving business fundamentals and intangibles point to solid business growh down the road, and where the market has undervalued that growth. That's arguably the most clear-cut, least risky, and easiest-to-understand scenario.

But other situations do present themselves, and although they may take weeks of professional-level analysis to fully grasp, they can be quite interesting. And in a few cases, they may be as easily justified by your own observations, common sense, and gut feeling as by the numbers.

In general, you're encouraged to be a do-it-yourselfer. But in many of the special situations, do-it-yourself may not be practical. Some of these value drivers can be well hidden and subjective - like a company's breakup value. They often turn into value not through normal business results but by being unlocked through acquisitions and restructurings. For these situations it makes sense to rely a bit more on industry professionals and analysts, who have access to key, paid-for data and a lot of historical precident. They can also pick up the phone and call the company itself or others who may have interest in the assets.

Smart value investors know when to - and when not to- rely on the work of others.


Also read:
Recognizing Value Situations
Recognizing Value Situations - Growth at a Reasonable Price
Recognizing Value Situations - The Fire Sale
Recognizing Value Situations - The Asset Play
Recognizing Value Situations - Growth Kickers
Recognizing Value Situations - Turning the Ship Around
Recognizing Value Situations - Cyclical Plays
Recognizing Value Situations - Smoke and Mirrors

The Thought Process Is What Counts

The Thought Process Is What Counts

In value investing, it really is the thought that counts. The thought process is important. This is how you think about your investments and investment decisions. Analysis doesn't decide for you; it only serves to support the thinking behind the choices you make.

There are many analytical blocks and approaches to appraising company value and many ways to decide whether the price paid for that value is right. These are evident in the postings in this blog. However, it is repeatedly obvious that no single method works all the time, and if one did, everyone would make the same findings and buy the same companies and values would no longer be values. Every article, every book, every value investor has a unique application of the vlaue investing thought process.

The thought process is the intellectual process - the philosophy - that the value investor internalizes. The tools are there to help, and different tools will help more at different times. If you strive to understand the business value underlying the price before you buy, investing history will be on your side. As you get good at understanding value and price, your investment decisions and performance will only improve.

In the real, practical world of value investing, value comes in many forms. There is so much detail on any given company (much of which you can't know) that it often isn't realistic to become a walking encyclopedia on a company or its fundamentals. And formulas and ratios, although they work and can help, hardly can deliver absolute answers. Usually, taking a few shortcuts makes sense, reserving the deepest analysis to the most critical, difficult and largest investing decisions.

As a practical matter, the so-called Pareto principle, also called the 80-20 rule, applies to investing as it does in much of business: 80 percent of the picture comes from 20 percent of the questions you may ask or facts you may collect about a business. If you focus on most critical aspects of a given business, you'll get most of the picture, without digging up 100 percent of everything about it. If this weren't the case, you'd spend six months analyzing each investment.

You can't spend days on each company and you can't analyze all companies in the investing universe. A simplified, practical approach will help the new value investor get started, and will also help experienced value investors improve their game. You'll undoubtedly find yourself adding plays to your value investing playbook as you gain experience. And you'll also get better at finding that 20 percent that's really important.


Famed fund manager Peter Lynch, in his famous book, One Up on Wall Street, shared this wisdom: "Once you're able to tell the story of a stock to your family, your friends or the dog, and so that even a child could understand it, then you have a proper grasp of the situation."

Shopping for Value: A Practical Approach

Shopping for Value: A Practical Approach

"Value investing boils down to finding a good business, analyzing it to find the simple truths about it, and deciding whether the truths are on track and the price is right."

The thought process is what counts.

1. Recognizing value situations:

  • Growth at a reasonable price (GARP)
  • The fire sale
  • The asset play
  • Growth kickers
  • Turning the ship around
  • Cyclical plays

2. Making a value judgement in practice

3. It ain't over until it's over

  • Keeping track
  • Making the "sell decision"

8 Questions That Define Your Investing Style

8 Questions That Define Your Investing Style
By Dayana Yochim April 29, 2009 Comments (3)


We're celebrating Financial Literacy Month in numeric style. Follow our crash course on maximizing your portfolio and finances with The 10 Essential Money Lessons.


The path to financial literacy follows a logical sequence from start to success. So far in this series you've:

  1. put your financial house in order,
  2. set aside the cash that you need for the near term,
  3. brushed up on some classic investing tomes,
  4. learned some key investing metrics,
  5. and kicked the tires on a couple of investment ideas.

Ready to invest? Set! And ... wait!

One more thing -- well, eight more things, actually.

Your moment of investing Zen
How well do you know yourself? Do you know your tolerance for risk and loss? Have you pinpointed your investing time horizon? To what degree are you interested in digging into stock research? In other words, what color is your investing parachute?

As Warren Buffett says, "Success in investing doesn't correlate with I.Q. ... what you need is the temperament to control the urges that get other people into trouble in investing." You've gotten this far, so it would be a shame to get sidetracked by emotional triggers that lead to bad investment decisions.

How are you wired?
Before you deploy your money in the market, take this quiz to identify your natural inclinations (both good and bad) so you can find the methods, philosophies, and strategies that best match the way your brain is wired.

1. You're at the store and on the shelf is an array of options for the product you need. Which are you most likely to toss into your shopping cart?

A. The brand you've purchased in the past, even though it lacks the bells and whistles of some of the others.
B. A pricier brand you've always wanted to try because it's on sale for 20% off today.
C. A brand-new product that promises revolutionary results.
D. A reasonably priced version that has not been FDA approved, but has gotten favorable reviews from its customers.

2. You log onto your brokerage account. Which scenario are you happiest to see?

A. The market's up a whopping 10%, but your stock gained just 1% during the run-up.
B. One of the companies you own missed hitting its earnings target and is down 30% as a result, giving you the opportunity to buy more shares at fire-sale prices.
C. Over the past six months a stock in your portfolio has traded anywhere from $10 to $80. It's at the low end of that range right now, but you think it has the potential to double or even quadruple over time.
D. One of your stocks is up 15%, but there's no obvious reason why, so you'll have to do more research to find out.

3. Which activity are you most likely to choose at the theme park?

A. A spin on the merry-go-round with your kids.
B. The newly revamped 3-D laser Zombie show.
C. The Nitro at Six Flags.
D. Forget the rides and head to the "Tastes of the World" food court.

4. How much information do you need to comfortably make buy, sell, or hold decisions?

A. You like to get regular company updates that are widely followed and analyzed by Wall Street, the media, and individual investors.
B. You prefer to check in on the business -- or its customers -- firsthand either in person or via online forums.
C. You regularly consult SEC filings, trade journals, and industry forums and do all your own analysis.
D. You're content with fairly regular coverage of the sector in which the company operates, even if news about your particular company can be spotty.

5. One of your companies is in the headlines today. Which event would not cause you to lose sleep tonight?

A. The company says it may have to temporarily suspend paying its dividend.
B. The launch of the company's next product has been delayed for at least several months.
C. The Board of Directors is making noises about ousting the CEO in order to install an industry veteran.
D. The currency of the country in which your company operates has taken a haircut.

6. If this were an "I'm a Mac/I'm a PC" ad, which company would you be?

A. Berkshire Hathaway (NYSE: BRK-A) (NYSE: BRK-B)
B. Buffalo Wild Wings (Nasdaq: BWLD)
C. Google (Nasdaq: GOOG)
D. America Movil (NYSE: AMX)

7. The business trajectory that most excites you is ...

A. A stable, mature company with some room to grow via cost-cutting efforts, strategic acquisitions, and/or partnerships.
B. A newcomer that has not yet made a name for itself (and may not for many years) and has no heady expectations priced into the stock.
C. An innovative -- and often volatile -- company that challenges the status quo and has the potential to dominate (or create) a business niche.
D. A company that is ideally positioned to capitalize on fast-growing economies overseas.

8. What kind of volatility are you willing to endure on the road to wealth?

A. I'm not looking for massive growth -- I'm willing to settle for a couple of years of so-so returns just so I don't lose a lot of money.
B. I'm willing to endure a few white-knuckle periods until my investment hits the bull's-eye.
C. I'll hold on for dear life -- even while everyone else is bailing -- if I truly believe that the long-term payoff will be big.
D. I can stomach volatility that is beyond the company management's control (e.g. currency fluctuations, political messes) if it means being in the right place at the right time.


The Key: What's your investing temperament?

Let's see how you're wired.

Mostly As: You've worked hard for your money and even if it means passing up headier potential returns, you're most comfortable limiting your exposure to risk. Patience is your investing virtue. Like the great Warren Buffett, you have the temperament to wait for a quality company to go on sale.

Your stocks probably won't wow anyone at a cocktail party -- after all, big-name, been-around-forever companies don't typically make for riveting chitchat. But when the confetti settles, it's your time to shine. If your portfolio were a party guest, it'd be the designated driver: sober but reliable. It gets you where you need to go with no hairpin turns or squealing wheels.

Look for quality companies that have seen their share prices temporarily discounted. You'd also do well to seek steady growth with investments that literally pay investors back -- dividend stocks. (These are the investing strategies we practice in our Inside Value and Income Investor services.)

Mostly Bs: Sound business practices (e.g., strong balance sheets, good management) are as important to you as any investor. But you're willing to look for these things where few others dare to tread -- in small-cap territory.

While the rest of the world is fixating on the name-brand players, you're prowling for their smaller, nimbler, lesser-known competition. At The Motley Fool, we call such companies Hidden Gems.

Because of their size, these companies fly well under Wall Street's radar. The flip side is, of course, that they can often wildly fluctuate in a single trading day. But if "Bs" dominated your quiz results, then you have the stomach to tolerate the volatility, particularly in the pursuit of bigger returns.

You could build a market-beating portfolio solely comprised of Hidden Gems (or any other type of investment, in fact). But it's probably more reasonable to devote just a portion of your investible assets to the best-of-small breed of stocks -- anywhere from 10% to 40% of a portfolio depending on your comfort level.

Mostly Cs: Innovation gets your heart racing. When high-def, Bluetooth-enabled, surround-sound rocket boots hit stores, you'll probably be the first person on your block to own a pair.
In investment terms, you seek companies that challenge the status quo -- those that take on an established business, reinvent it, and eventually usurp the original. Even better are those that create an entirely new market for something everyone didn't even realize we couldn't live without.

At the Fool we call these companies Rule Breakers (apt, eh?). And in every way, these businesses defy the rules. Traditional valuation metrics like P/E ratios and discounted cash-flow calculations don't fly in the land of Rule Breakers. The numbers often look wacky because the Street simply doesn't have the tools to accurately assess these companies' merits, so as a shareholder you need to stay alert and be psychologically nimble enough to reevaluate your investment thesis. Flexibility is a must.

Also be aware of the rule of Daedalus: You can't keep flying higher and higher without eventually getting burned. This may be the most exciting kind of investing there is. But you must recognize the big-risk/big-reward connection. Your mistakes will cost you. But it's a lot less painful if you spread the risk around with other asset classes.

Mostly Ds: You are a worldly Fool. In the pursuit of investment opportunities, you're not afraid to tread into foreign territory -- literally. You recognize that the rate of growth of our economy versus others has changed. The U.S. will still grow, but there are countries where the growth opportunities are astronomical.

"International" is not an investing strategy per se. In our Global Gains newsletter service we seek investment opportunities overseas no matter what label they carry -- small cap, value, Rule Breaker, etc.

If you pine for foreign flavor in your portfolio get comfy with a little less clarity from the companies in this universe. Your comfort level with different accounting methods, shareholder laws, currency risks, and even "political risk" will determine how much of your portfolio to devote to international fare.

A combination of As, Bs, Cs, and Ds: No, you're not fickle. You simply seek a variety of opportunities to make your money grow. In your heart you know that investing in the stock market is the one true way to build inflation-beating wealth over the long term. But sometimes your doubts overcome your determination to stay the course. You can be gun-shy, perhaps because of a few investing missteps in the past (burned by a hot tip, perhaps?). Or maybe the stock market's recent contortions have left you questioning how much risk you really can stomach.

Your answers reveal a temperament that recognizes the true price of opportunity (taking on some amount of risk) and the real cost of waiting out the storm (missing the market's brief yet inevitable uptick). You've got a mind-set that's well-suited to allocating portions of your portfolio to the best investments from a variety of stock-picking approaches.

Establishing clear parameters -- an asset allocation model -- is the way to go. As to how much to put into which pot, the correct answer is the one that best lets you sleep at night and stick it out through thick and thin. Don't fight your natural tendencies ... instead play to your strengths and seek investments that sit well with you.

Finally, consider that the stock market's recent gyrations may be influencing your answers. That's understandable; even the best investors have been rattled, and may even be questioning their own core strategies. However, in volatility, there is opportunity. Not just in finding bargain stocks, but in taking the pulse of your own investing temperament in a real-world/real-money scenario.

Now that you've gotten a handle on your finances and have tuned into your inner investor, you're ready for our bonus tip. Tomorrow, we're going to give you the rundown about Foolishly investing in the stock market. Check back then!


In the mood for more financial know-how? Check out the rest of our 10 Essential Money Lessons.

Before joining The Motley Fool, Dayana Yochim's investing temperament could be confused for that of an 87-year-old widow. Today she is a mix of As, Bs, Cs, and Ds -- a true investing moderate. The Fool's disclosure policy is steady as she goes. Berkshire Hathaway is a Stock Advisor and Inside Value recommendation. Google is a Rule Breakers selection and America Movil is a Global Gains pick. Buffalo Wild Wings is a Motley Fool Hidden Gems recommendation. The Fool owns shares of Berkshire Hathaway and Buffalo Wild Wings.

http://www.fool.com/investing/general/2009/04/29/8-questions-that-define-your-investing-style.aspx

Markets face 20pc fall if swine flu spreads

Markets face 20pc fall if swine flu spreads

World stock markets could fall by 15pc-20pc if the World Health Organisation (WHO) upgrades the swine flu outbreak to a "phase 5" crisis, a leading fund manager has warned.

By Alistair Osborne
Last Updated: 9:14PM BST 29 Apr 2009

Mark Bon, at Canada Life, based his calculation on the market reaction in Asia to 2003's SARS outbreak, which killed 813 people.

The WHO yesterday said it was "moving closer" to raising its six-level pandemic alert to "phase 5", which is characterised by human-to-human spread of the virus into at least two countries in one WHO region.

Mr Bon said that, as the crisis moves closer to a pandemic, "it alters the economic environment and people behave differently. They stop shopping in crowded areas and they travel less."

So far the markets have shrugged off the swine flu threat, with the FTSE-100 last night closing up 93.19, or 2.27pc, at 4189.59. However, Mr Bon said: "If the market is wrong-footed, the reaction could be quite severe."

Narim Behravesh, chief economist at IHS Global Insight, warned that a pandemic could cut GDP in developed economies by 2pc-3pc, exacerbating the world downturn. "For poorer countries, the impact would be devastating," he said.


http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/economics/5246131/Markets-face-20pc-fall-if-swine-flu-spreads.html

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