6 Strategies to maintain your personal finance

It is very important to follow right personal finance strategies. You will have to be judicious enough to manage your personal finance. It is essential for a person to save money and also maintain a debt free life. Personal finance strategies can help you do that. You can also take help from financial experts to efficiently manage your personal finance.

Personal finance strategies

In order to maintain your personal finance, other than taking the help of financial experts you will also have to keep an eye on your finances.

  1. Do budgeting – The most essential step that you should take toward management of your finances is budgeting. Budgeting is the structural and conceptual way of determining your savings. Budgeting helps you to save more and maintain a good personal finance status.

  2. Save as much as possible – As you do budgeting you are able to save some money. Other than this, you should also try to minimize plastic money usage so that you incur fewer debts. If you have minimal debt, you will be able to maintain your finances easily and save more money.

  3. Buy insurance policies – In order to have secure future, you should also buy insurance policies as per your needs. Buying insurance policies is another important step involved in personal finance strategy. There are various policies available like life insurance, health insurance, credit insurance, home insurance, travel insurance, etc.

  4. Invest your money – In order get good return on your investments, you will have to choose a good investment vehicle. If you invest money now, you may earn good money to have a secure future. You will also be able to use this money toward paying off debts. Debts can create havoc in your personal finance matters.

  5. Pay off your debts – You need to diligently pay off your debts in order to maintain a good financial status. Maintain a list off all your debts to avoid messing up payments on your accounts. Also, if you are facing problems in making debt payments, you can try out the various debt relief options.

  6. Do credit checks – You should also check your credit report regularly to maintain your finances efficiently. Bad credit will negatively affect your personal finance status.

Other than doing all these, you can also take help of financial experts who will help you in taking the right steps in regards to your personal finance.

How to Use Technical Indicators to Complement Elliott Wave Analysis


The MSCI Asia Apex Index combines 50 of the largest stocks in Hong Kong, Taiwan and Korea. The following Elliott wave development in the index provided Elliott Wave International's Asian-Pacific Short Term Update Editor Chris Carolan an opportunity to show his readers how he uses three of his favorite technical indicators to anticipate trend changes.

You can find the complete details in Chris Carolan's online trading course, "3 Technical Indicators to Help You Ride the Elliott Wave Trend," but here is a quick peek.

Technical indicators in the Asia Apex Index

Chris's primary tool for spotting trend reversals is the Wave Principle. It was wave analysis that suggested prices of Asia's 50 largest stocks were about to fall as the five-wave impulse structure (see chart above) was nearing completion. But to confirm his view, Chris also used these three indicators. (He shows you the details of his technique in the trading course.)
1. Relative Strength Index (RSI) noted a divergence with the MSCI Asia Apex Index price: As the price moved higher, the RSI moved lower.
2. Digital Signal Filter (Jurik RSX), an enhanced RSI, was at the top of its range.
3. Prices breached the Keltner Channel (dotted brown line).

And here's what happened after Chris's forecast:

Technical indicators in the Asia Apex Index

You can learn the complete details of Chris's forecasting technique in his 42-minute on-demand, online trading course "3 Technical Indicators to Help You Ride the Elliott Wave Trend." You will learn how to get the most out of each of these indicators using detailed charts of real-world examples.

* Good Deal: Get "3 Technical Indicators to Help You Ride the Elliott Wave Trend" now for just $49.

* BEST deal: Get it FREE when you start a risk-free subscription to Chris Carolan's Asian-Pacific Short Term Update or European Short Term Update.

Accountability

I’m trying to brainstorm ways of keeping myself accountable…(or others for that matter).

I’m in the slightly unique situation of not having to answer to anybody. This means I have no boss or anyone who will yell at me if something doesn’t get done. If I have a bad month in terms of how much money I made, it’s literally 100% my fault. I also don’t have people which depend on me getting certain things done.

I analyzed some situations where things get done, even when you’re lazy about them:

* In school, if I didn’t finish my homework I’d get a bad grade.
* In a company, if you don’t finish certain things you can get fired.
* In a company, you might have people who depend on what you’re doing, so if you don’t finish, they get mad at you.

These are all great reasons to get something done before the deadline even if you don’t want to.

So each of these has a:

1. Task that needs to get done.
2. Someone expecting or dependent on the task getting done.
3. A negative consequence that happens if you DON’T finish.

I make monthly goals all the time, but I realized until I decided to blog everyday there is NO ACCOUNTABILITY for each of my goals (you may recall I openly set that goal with NevBlog readers, and in addition set a negative consequence if it doesn’t happen). So that goal has all the elements of a task that WILL GET DONE. But what about the others?

So I’m brainstorming some ways that I can get all my goals done:

* Posting each goal on this blog (but what if it’s something I don’t want to be public)?
* Get a Business Coach to discuss each goal and call me about its progress and due date (kind of like the accountability MyBodyTutor gave me for the 6-Pack Experiment which worked BEAUTIFULLY).
* I could set a negative consequence for each goal, but it’s missing the #2 part of the formula (someone expecting or dependent on the task).

Hmmm…..so it looks like the best way is to have some sort of business coach that I speak to several times a month that keeps me accountable.

Has anyone found some great ways of keeping their goals and ALWAYS getting them done?

Auctions vs. Negotiated Sales

Middle-market business sellers have important choices in their divestiture process. One key choice is whether or not you desire to have an auction OR a negotiated sale.

Sale by Auction is a multi-stage and sometimes complicated process. The investment banker markets your firm to multiple prospective buyers through potentially more than one round of activity, with successively smaller groups of buyers competing for the purchase. This process is resource intensive and in difficult M&A markets entails a hint of idealism as well – the belief that your business will be attractive to a relevant number of buyers. When executed properly, though, an auction will have a positive impact on business value – price and terms. A side benefit is that it also encourages speed of execution via quick action by buyers. In the leveraged buyout boom of the 90s, auctions were very common and today are still a preferred method of marketing a business. Auctions provide a greater degree of comfort that the market has been exploited and is giving the seller a broader set of responses as to value. Auctions do, however, have their downside. Even the most astute investment banker who admonishes prospective buyers and ensures they sign strong Non-Disclosure Agreements cannot control how information may be used once it gets into the hands of prospective suitors. Therefore, auctions can have a negative impact on employee morale if information of a pending sale should leak. Sometimes bidders may collude as well. And these variables can ultimately lead to reduced leverage when negotiating once the “winning” buyer is chosen.

A Negotiated Sale is much narrower in scope. It entails direct dialogue with a single prospective suitor. Of course, negotiated sales ensure the highest degree of confidentiality in a sale process. They are less disruptive to the business and can provide greater flexibility regarding deal timelines and deadlines. They can also help minimize “taint” – the potential negative perception in the marketplace if a negotiation fails. However, they generally provide less seller leverage and competitive tension. This might result in a seller not extracting full value from their business sale. Moreover, if the buyer is a direct competitor it may expose important and sometimes proprietary information to that buyer.

Which approach is best for you? It depends on your desires and the marketplace in which your business operates. Speak with your CFA professional so that they may walk you through each process (and hybrid approaches) in detail so that the approach chosen optimizes your interests.

Current Market Multiples and What Your Banker Won’t Tell You

We had discussed earnings multiples and their value to the Mergers & Acquisitions process. As previously discussed, we tend to view earnings multiples as shortcuts which, when properly applied, can be useful as sanity checks, but we certainly would never recommend acquiring or selling a privately-held business strictly based upon an earnings or purchase price multiple.

Of course, there are many factors which influence multiples, as we discussed previously. One factor is the prevailing or current economic condition. We all know how bad the economy got in 2008 and 2009. We hope we are on the road to recovery, but there are still some rocks in our path.

Purchase price multiples are post-mortem account; you do not know the number until the transaction is closed. That is one of the problems with reviewing multiples. However, we do know during the period of 2006 to the middle of 2008, purchase price multiples were higher than they had been in the 2003 to 2005 timeframe. Those of us in the M&A business watched as purchase price multiples declined during the latter half of 2008 and the first nine months of 2009. Thankfully, we have seen a recovery in the market and a slight increase in multiples.

So what drives multiples? There is one key ingredient in the multiple recipe very few outside of the M&A industry understand or recognize, but this ratio is the driving force in almost all leveraged transactions. What is this mystery formula?

When analyzing credit requests (a/k/a loan requests by buyers), banks review and calculate myriad ratios. One such calculation includes measuring the ratio of a company’s Earnings Before Interest, Taxes, Depreciation and Amortization (EBITDA) against the debt being borrowed. In our terms, we call this the “EBITDA to Senior Debt ratio.”

Here is how this works: Company A has EBITDA of $2,000,000. Bank Z has an EBITDA to Senior Debt ratio of 3. That means Bank Z would be willing to lend a buyer up to $6,000,000 ($2,000,000 times the multiplier ratio of 3) to acquire Company A.

Of course, this assumes Company A has enough assets to support $6,000,000 in leverage (debt). If Company A does not have enough asset value to support the leverage (both term debt and/or a revolving line of credit), regardless of the cash flow, Bank Z will only lend what is supported by the asset value. The table below illustrates this example:

Company A Book Value Advance Rate Debt Available
Accounts Receivable $2,000,000 75% $1,500,000
Inventory $1,000,000 50% $500,000
Fixed Assets $1,000,000 30% $300,000
Total $4,000,000 . $2,200,000

We have used Advance Rate to be the measure for what percentage of the underlying value of the asset Bank Z will lend to a borrower.

As you can see from the table above, a buyer looking to borrow money from Bank Z would only be able to borrow approximately $2.2 million, even though the Bank Z’s own ratio can support higher borrowing.

Back in 2006 to 2008, we saw plenty of senior lenders who would lend on what we call “air balls,” that is, the gap between the total debt available for leverage and the maximum amount the bank would allow on its EBITDA to Senior Debt ratio. However, with the crash of the economy in 2008, very few senior lenders, if any, are willing to lend on cash flow.

Historically, during the “go growth” period of 2005 to 2008, we saw the EBITDA to Senior Debt ratio go as high as 4.1 to 4.4 (for companies who had at least $10 million of EBITDA; the ratio was lower for smaller companies). At the trough of the market in early 2009, we saw the ratio drop to 1.75 to 1.85! Today, for companies with less than $5 million of EBITDA, the ratio is approximately 1.85 to 2.25; for larger companies, the ratio has crept up to 2.5 to 2.8, perhaps a little more for really large companies.

Using our table above, if Bank Z’s EBITDA to Senior Debt ratio fell to 1.85 like most lenders at the nadir of the Great Recession, the most a buyer could borrow to acquire Company A is $1.85 million (1.85 times $1 million of EBITDA) even though Company A had assets which could be leveraged to $2.2 million.

What does all of this have to do with purchase price or earnings multiples? As the EBITDA to Senior Debt ratio declines, purchase price multiples for leveraged transactions have to decline as well because there is simply less leverage available for the buyers to make acquisitions.

Imagine the following scenario: Company B has $2,000,000 of EBITDA and wants to sell its business for $10,000,000, which is an EBITDA multiple of 5. Buyer 1 wants to acquire Company B and goes to Bank Z for a loan, whose own, depressed EBITDA to Senior Debt ratio is now at 2. Company B is told it can only borrow $4,000,000 from Bank Z. To fill the $6,000,000 gap between what Company B wants for its business and what Buyer 1 can borrow from Bank Z, Buyer 1 will either have to increase the equity it puts into the deal, thus significantly lowering its own return on equity, borrow from a high-priced cash flow (mezzanine) lender, lower its offer, or walk away.

A buyer who does not have to use leverage to make an acquisition will be unconcerned by this ratio. But, for the vast majority of buyers of middle-market companies, leverage is a requirement in all their transactions, so this is a fundamental, driving force in valuations.

Having now gone through three downturn M&A cycles in the past 21 years, we are very familiar with the ebb & flow of the EBITDA to Senior Debt ratio. When the ratio increases, purchase price multiples increase; when it declines, so do acquisition prices.

Unfortunately, no banker will really disclose this number to you, it is not published anywhere, and most banks seem to use the same ratios. However, if you recognize the importance of this ratio, you will understand why purchase price multiples are so heavily dependent on the availability of leverage.

Value of Companies

After a career spent buying and selling companies, I’ve learned that the essence of a deal comes down to this simple fact:

A company is sold when its value is greater to the buyer than it is to the seller.

This obvious statement raises the more complex question: Why is the value of the same company different for the buyer and the seller? This can also be answered in a simple, though perhaps less obvious, statement:

Value is the future cash flows to the owner over time, discounted by the owner’s risk discount rate.

Now, this starts to get more complex. The values are different because the cash flows over time will be different for different owners, and because each owner has a different discount rate. In addition, the discount for the same owner will change over time.

Here are two examples from the owner’s perspective:

  1. Think of a company owned by a relatively young person in his mid thirties. You don’t often hear of these owners selling their companies. Here’s why: for this owner, he expects to get a 30-year return of future cash flows. Plus, he will expect to grow those cash flows at a rate greater than inflation over the 30 years.Equally important, his discount rate for risk is low. His rate is low because he has a 30-year window to adjust and recover from the bad things that will happen along the way. He can weather a three-year recession and still be building value when the economy recovers. His health is good, so there is little risk that he will be forced to sell his company during a period of lower M&A valuations.
  2. Now think of a company owned by a person in his sixties. His future income stream is really only three or five, or maybe seven years long. He cannot expect significant growth in that income stream in those few years. He is not prepared to make extra investment of time or money to accelerate growth. Even if he had an idea to stimulate growth, there is little time to implement it, it would have risk and the rewards may come after he is retired.The other piece of this owner’s equation is that his risk discount rate is much higher. His company faces risks daily from the economy, increasing taxes, regulations, new competitors, lost key employees and his own personal health. With a short time horizon to recover, this owner runs the risk of significantly diminished cash flow when it is time to sell. The inability to recover from all these risks put a high discount on future earnings. The combination of these two factors – cash flow and risk – is exactly why owners decide to sell their companies when they approach the end of their careers.

So, what does it look like from the buyer’s perspective? To get a deal done, a buyer has to expect higher cash flows and a lower risk discount rate. Consider these examples of how two types of buyers value cash flow and accommodate risk:

  1. Strategic buyers are companies that buy companies that have synergies with them and that fit into the buyer’s bigger strategy. One of the big reasons acquisitions are more valuable to strategic buyers is that they count on an immediate step-up in the cash flows when they reduce operating costs by consolidating the companies. More powerfully, high-value strategic acquisitions step up cash flow because they give the buyer the opportunity to drive increased sales of the acquired company’s products to the buyer’s customers and to sell the buyer’s products to the acquired company’s customers.Equally as important, strategic buyers have a lower risk discount rate because the strategic buyer is a larger, stronger company. As a division of a strategic buyer, the acquired company can withstand external shocks that may have killed it as a stand-along entity. The strategic owner can bring in additional expertise to help shore up weak areas in the acquired company. Strategic buyers can tolerate more risk in a division of their company than the owner of a private company can tolerate.
  2. Financial buyers are institutional investors that acquire companies with the objective of earning a return on their investment by growing the company more rapidly than the seller is able and then re-selling the company in three to seven years. While strategic buyers get immediate cost savings, financial buyers expect to bring additional capital resources to the company that can support faster growth both through add-on acquisitions and organic expansion. To give comfort that the cash flow will continue under their new ownership, financial buyers frequently require that the owner and his management team stay on with the company for several years after the sale.While Financial Buyers have high internal return-on-investment expectations for their own investment, they typically have a lower discount rate than the seller. This is most often the case when the seller is over 50 years old and is reluctant to re-invest his own capital to grow or to take business risks that may hurt the value he has built in the company. To the institutional owner, the same company is one of a portfolio of investments owned by the financial buyer. The company’s short-term risks are less important to the institutional owner so their discount rate is lower.

The differences in value between owners and buyers are what drive all successful mergers and acquisitions. Deals happen when the value is greater for the buyer than the seller. What is important to both sides is the final price of the deal. The final price is dependent on each side understanding the other’s valuation metrics and negotiating the final price closer to their counterpart’s number.

Young owners rarely sell their companies because they have a strong future with time to recover from the bad things that invariably happen to private companies. Sometimes a buyer sees such huge strategic value in a young company that their expected earnings and low discount rate make it smart for them to pay a lot of money to acquire them. This happens most often in high-tech M&A (see companies acquired by Google, Cisco, and Yahoo). On the other side, owners who wait until late in the game have let their discount rate get so high that their value diminishes each year. Savvy financial buyers and strategic buyers like to buy these companies at the low valuation that is finally left for the owners.

For most of the private company owners I have worked with, the wealth they have built in their companies is more than half their total net worth. Whether they plan to sell in twenty years, ten years, or next year, it is important to keep track of what the value is to them and what the value may be to a qualified buyer. When the owner gets to a point where that value to him is less than the value of his company to a strategic or financial buyer, he should sell their company to lock in and preserve his wealth. Owners need to be thinking regularly about their expected future earnings and about their own personal discount rate. As these two variables change over time, their decision to hold or sell will also change.

AT&T, Verizon Could Challenge Visa Mobile Payments

Step aside Visa and MasterCard, AT&T and Verizon are here to take your place.
That’s not bound to happen any time soon, but the nation’s biggest credit card companies could face some competition from the large wireless carriers.
The partnership between AT&T, Verizon and T-Mobile USA, first reported by Bloomberg, is in testing stages. The new system would allow customers to pay by waving their smart phone past some sort of terminal. It could involve financial institutions Discover and Barclays Plc.
Moving in on the territory of seemingly unrelated businesses wouldn’t be anything new for smart phone carriers. Smart phones have taken slices out of GPS, web browsing and media markets already.
Visa Already on the Swipeless Scene
The smart phone payment system would represent an interesting addition to the payment market as well as the utility of smart phones, but the wireless companies wouldn’t be the first to try the technology.

Visa
Visa already rolled out its payWave application, which allows customers to scan their iPhones past a portal to pay instead of swiping the same way AT&T’s proposed product would. One difference is that retailers might be happy to have the cell phone companies around after haggling over transaction fees for years with market leaders Visa and MasterCard. Recent financial reform legislation limited debit card swipe fees, but the relationship between Visa and merchants is still tenuous.
Whether it is Visa, MasterCard or a wireless company that ultimately triumphs, now is the right time to hop on the mobile bandwagon. Electronic purchases already make up more than half of America’s purchases, and more than half of U.S. consumers will use mobile financial services in the next five years, according to a Mercatus, LLC, survey.

Getting a Loan to Pay Off Debt

Should you get a loan to pay off debt? In most cases, no. Just because you can get a loan to pay off your debt, doesn’t mean you should. After all, are you really “paying it off” by using another loan? What you’re doing is delaying the inevitable and/or making the debt a bit less painful to bear (either because you lower the interest rate, payment, or lengthen the time you have to pay it off).
But I know there are circumstances where life happens and backs you into a corner, debt-wise. Whether it’s a job loss, or unexpected medical costs, life can send you in a tail spin and leave you with excessive credit card debt. Most of us have been there. At this point you can choose to do a couple of different things. First, you need to make sure you stop the bleeding. Find a way to get more income, and/or drastically reduce your expenses to live within the means that you do have. If you don’t do those things then you’ll be right back here in a few months or years looking for another loan to help you get rid of credit card debt.
Should you get a loan to pay off debt?
Next, you can try and tackle this debt yourself by negotiating interest rates with credit cards, developing a debt reduction plan, and basically taking this debt on head first. Remember, there is no Obama credit card debt relief. Finally, like I said above, you can use a loan to help you delay or extend the debt pay off process. Here are some loans you could use.
Different Loans to Pay Off Debt
Home Equity Loan – If you own a home and have some equity (your home is worth more than you owe on it), you could tap into that equity and get a loan for the amount of your debt. Doing so will likely take a high-interest debt and reduce it to a lower interest rate. However, you are taking an unsecured debt and turning it into a secured debt. You are putting your home at risk because of some retail spending. Not a good move.
Peer to Peer Loan – Take the banks out of the equation. Borrow some money from on online lending service. Peer to peer lending is growing in popularity because of the lack of credit elsewhere, and because it makes sense for some people. If you use this type of loan, you’ll likely pay less interest over time, and you can extend your monthly payments to a more manageable level. Read more about the option of peer to peer lending.
Personal Loan – Some banks or credit unions will give you a personal loan if they can see consistent deposits in your checking account and a steady paycheck. These loans aren’t secured so there is no asset at risk except your checking account. You can likely reduce the amount of interest on your debts significantly by using a personal loan.

Life Insurance Loan – If you have a life insurance policy with a cash value portion, you can take a loan against those funds to help you pay for the debt. I’m not a fan of this option since it goes against the original goal of the money, to protect your spouse and children.

Debt Consolidation Loan – Take all your debt and put it on one payment plan. You have to be careful with these loans because the company who if performing the consolidation for you is in business to make money off of you. In most cases with a debt consolidation, you will pay more interest over the long term and it will take you much longer to pay off the debt. Finally, people who consolidate debts this way often find themselves in dangerous levels of debt again. In other words, they don’t address the route cause.

401K Loan – Similar to a life insurance loan, the 401K loan borrows money from a source where the original intent is something other than consolidating debt. For this reason, I’m not a fan of using a 401K loan to help you pay off debt. But these loans are pretty easy to make. Your 401K administrator isn’t concerned with what you use the money for. They will just loan you the money. And when you pay back the money, the minimal interest rate is actually paid to your 401K balance.

Balance Transfer – If you can get accepted, you might be able to complete a credit card debt balance transfer. You could do your own consolidation by taking all your outstanding balances and transferring the debt to one single credit card. In most cases, the new credit card will have a promotional 0% interest rate period and a 3% to 5% fee to make the transfer. I’ve made this move with success in the past, but it’s getting harder and harder to perform this move nowadays.

What's In The Financial Reform Bill?

Now that the Senate has passed the financial reform bill, it's off to non-smoke-filled rooms, where it will go into a Blendtec with the version passed by the House last year. CNNMoney.com sifted through all 1,600 pages of the bill and came up with a handy cheat sheet explaining what's actually likely to change when this thing becomes a law.

Here are some of the main points:

Dealing with 'too big to fail' firms: Creates a new process for unwinding big financial firms that reembles the powers that the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. has to shut failing banks.

Breaking up banks: Gives regulators strengthened powers to break up financial companies that have grown too big and threaten to destabilize the financial system.

Creating a consumer agency: Establishes an independent Consumer Financial Protection Bureau housed inside the Federal Reserve. Bank fees fund the agency, which would set rules to curb unfair practices in consumer loans and credit cards.

New oversight power: Creates a new oversight council that would look out for major problems at large financial firms. The Treasury Department gains a key role in enforcing tougher regulations on larger firms and watching for systemic risk. The council also has veto power over new rules proposed by new consumer regulator.

There's a lot more, so be sure to check out the full list. Or go ahead and read all 1,600 pages, and let us know what you find.


Dilbert on Diversification

Scott Adams, the author/creator of the Dilbert comic strip, has some very sensible things to say about asset diversification in this great blog post, World’s Simplest Portfolio:
First, let’s assume the hypothetical money is invested entirely for retirement, so we don’t need to worry about keeping any of it liquid for college or buying a house. That assumption is just to keep things simple.
Second, we’re only talking about investments up to 10 years prior to your planned retirement…
I suggest, as a starting point for our discussion, that a perfectly adequate simple portfolio for young(ish) people might involve putting 50% of your money in an ETF from Vanguard (VTI), which captures the entire Wilshire 5000 … The fees for the ETF are a low .015% per year, and because ETF managers don’t do much buying and selling within the portfolio, it doesn’t generate much taxable income to pass along to investors…
For the remaining 50% your investments, let’s say you buy the Vanguard Emerging Market ETF (VWO) with a .27% expense ratio. That gives you a play on the best companies in emerging markets around the world, at low cost, with excellent diversity, and low taxes.
Asset diversification really can be just this easy. Adams’s advice underscores how bizarre the diversification message is in E*Trade’s “Wolf Call” commercial:
What does it mean to diversify like a wolf? In a world with low-cost stock indexes, asset diversification is downright boring. Hardly something to brag about to your girlfriend.
Adams’s post, however, makes a claim with which I take issue. He says:
I picked 50% to allocate to this investment because I contend that no expert has a good reason for picking a different figure. Some experts might tell you 25% is the right allocation for U.S. stocks, and some might say 75%. I contend that most allocation recommendations of that sort are no more defensible than horoscopes.
Adams is right when it comes to traditional allocation advice. In Lifecycle Investing, we similarly criticize the “birthday rule,” which arbitrarily advises investors to allocate “110 minus your age” in stock. The birthday rule counsels 20-year-olds to invest 90 percent of their portfolio in stock, and 60-year-olds to allocate 50 percent to stock. Adams is right that such advice has become the industry consensus without the benefit of good theory or empiricism.
But Barry Nalebuff and I derive an optimal allocation rule that maximizes expected utility for an investor with constant relative risk aversion:
Samuelson share = Return/(Risk2 * Risk Aversion).
In a recent post, I showed how this allocation equation can be updated to take into account changed expectations about risk and return. Lifecycle Investing shows that this allocation equation (when properly applied to the present value of current and future savings contributions) will often lead young people to invest 200 percent of their current portfolio in stocks.
Adams’s approach still wins hands down in a simplicity contest (and in fact, before I wrote this book my portfolio emulated his advice). But we show that there are substantial gains from doing some extra work to better spread market risk across time. Historically, the Leverage Lifecycle approach can reduce risk by more than 20 percent. Or, the benefits of this new diversification technology can be channeled to safely increase your expected return by 60 percent. Until a mutual fund has the good sense to automate our system (we’re working on it), time diversification will require some additional work. But doing a better job diversifying risk across time can be worth the effort.

High Frequency Swanning – The Crash Camp Takes Over

Here a Swan, there a Swan, everywhere a Black Swan...
Newsletter writers, hedge fund managers, journalists, bloggers, technicians, fundamental analysts, economists and strategists are joining the crash camp left and right. Not the bear camp...the crash camp.
I've been running around Manhattan all day taking care of business, meeting clients etc. After scanning today's articles and blog posts, I can honestly say that I've never heard more chatter about an imminent market crash, all at once, in my life. It's like the May 6th Flash Crash got everyone in the mood to talk cataclysm all of a sudden.
I'm not one of those guys who takes everything as a contrarian signal. I abhor knee-jerk contrarianism. Samuel Lord once said "Do not choose to be wrong for the sake of being different," and I think that's kind of apropos here.
As avowed contrarian Dougie Kass likes to remind us, the crowd usually outsmarts the remnant when herd mentality takes over. So what is the herd hearing/ seeing?
* First of all, the macro guys are disturbed by the Euro Zone's crisis and its ripple effect/ contagion risk. This isn't new but it is more pervasive. And the possibility of a China collapse scares the hell out of almost everyone.
* The technicians and Dow Theorists are grossed out and have dusted off all the 1937 charts again. Specifically, they are looking at the highly distinct pattern of a big drop (May 6th) followed by a failed rally (euro bailout day's 4% gap open) followed by another fast sell-off. Richard Russell's latest missive, in which he tells us that we won't recognize America by year's end, will make you want to kill yourself.
* Equity analysts are all pointing to year-over-year comps which will start getting harder now. They may feel OK about the "E" but they're shaky about the "P" - will the tax hikes and regulatory headwinds we now face really allow for a high-teens multiple on whatever the earnings turn out to be?
* Bond guys are freaking out about sovereign stuff, obviously. We've transferred corporate risks onto government balance sheets with bailouts, the Piper still awaits his payment in many cases.
* Eddie Elfenbein posted the results of a CNBC poll yesterday in which 40% of respondents predicted a 50% haircut for the Dow. Seriously, almost half the respondents predicted Dow 5000 by the end of this year.
* The hedgies are vocally bearish again as well. Seth Klarman's got some cautious commentary out today and Jeremy Grantham's "sell everything" stuff is being quoted everywhere. Raoul Pal put out a newsletter this week with a 2 day-to-2 week crash prediction.
We're not talking garden variety bearishness here. We're talking about ubiquitous crash predictions. My comment is that I've never seen so much certainty in so many places of a coming crash. Will it be self-fulfilling or are we talking major contrarian signal?
Worth noting no matter what.
Source: http://www.thereformedbroker.com/2010/05/18/high-frequency-swanning-the-crash-camp-takes-over/

Volatility, Luck And A Margin Of Safety

Part of the new normal for investors is getting used to more volatility. – Eric Jackson
At any point in time there is never a shortage of analysts willing to argue that the stock market is overvalued or undervalued. Until recently, few have had much to say on the topic of volatility and the stock market. Now that volatility has once again returned to the stock market it begs the question: Is this necessarily a bad thing?
As we argued last week the one-way bet in equities that lasted for the better part of two-plus decades has given way to fears about the increasingly turbulent global macroeconomic situation. Some even argue that the search for diversification in this morass has become futile as investors pile into supposedly safe assets like gold.
This increased market volatility has set off a slew of posts on the topic. Let’s quickly recap some of the findings.
CXO Advisory Group finds no evidence for volatility to filter “good” or “bad” market days.
Mark Hulbert finds “no statistically significant relationship between periods of high volatility and the market’s subsequent direction.”
This paper by Weigand, Gorman and Sapra finds that volatility and alpha dispersion are correlated.
Mark Hulbert (again) finds that momentum strategies perform best in times of relative market calm.
Taking these findings at face value tells us two things. One, volatility has little to tell us about the future performance of the stock market as a whole. Two, volatility could be a useful signal in constructing stock selection models. This is contrast to what Felix Salmon argued in a piece last week that volatility really doesn’t provide any useful signals for stock selection.
Salmon goes on to argue that not only should volatility push investors away from the stock market so should the equity risk premium or lack thereof. Commenting on an Eric Falkenstein blog post, Salmon writes:
This is the heart of my case against investing in stocks. For one thing, you have no good reason to expect an equity premium going forward, and if there isn’t an equity premium, then your allocation to stocks should be tiny: you’re not being compensated for the extra risk you’re taking. On top of that is the question of volatility, which is not exactly the same as risk, but which again should be compensated for with higher returns, and isn’t.
If you believe that the equity risk premium is low (or zero) there is little or no reason to make a passive investment in the equity market. In short, there is no there, there. This argument isn’t new to any one reading Abnormal Returns as we focused on this line of thinking last yer.
Eric Falkenstein notes the many ways in which our thinking on the nature of risk and return in the equity markets is all mixed up. Rather than there being some sort of monotonic positive relationship between risk and return, Falkenstein believes our risk-seeking behavior tends to blow this relationship up.
Even if you believe like Salmon or Falkenstein that there is little or no equity risk premium it does not necessarily follow that you should ignore the stock market altogether. If you believe that market volatility is in excess of the volatility of equity’s underlying fair value then by definition there have to be alpha opportunities. Said another way if assume that a stock’s value is relatively stable then if the market is wildly gyrating there are going to be times the stock is both under- and over-valued.
Last week we hypothesized that an active approach to stock selection could take advantage of this very situation. We wrote:
In short, you can’t beat the computers at their own game. Instead you need to play an entirely different game. One that puts a longer-term focus on individual companies and their underlying values. Otherwise the volatility inherent in this kind of market will eventually wear you down or wipe you out.
Then again nobody said it would be easy, Falkenstein weighs in:
In reality, you either have to hope for lady luck, or actually do a lot of work finding your investing alpha looking for subtle patterns, or like Warren Buffet actually manage the companies you own to perform better than average. The idea that a passive approach to equities implies higher-than-average returns puts you at the mercy of brokers who may be selling diamonds in the rough, but usually are selling hope…
Stock picking is hard, but if you don’t want to stick all your money in TIPS, it may be one of the few ways to make money in what some people believe will be difficult times over the next decade. So while volatility may create opportunities, it also serves a useful purpose as a warning to investors.
Rolfe Winkler notes how much of the uproar surrounding the flash crash has to do with the attendant increase in market volatility. He argues that volatility in and of itself may be a useful thing:
Besides, volatility is healthy. The “Great Moderation” in the years running up to 2007, notably the extreme predictability of U.S. monetary policy, led to complacency and, ultimately, the credit crunch. Unexpected drops remind investors to operate with healthy margins of safety. That’s a lesson of the recent crisis that no-one should try to regulate away.
We live in an increasingly interconnected, complex world filled with the potential for volatility. If a step-up in market volatility forces investors to think long and hard about whether their investments are both appropriate and have some margin of safety then it will have served its purpose.
*Falkenstein himself provides some strategies that do seek to outperform the market by exploiting investors penchant for risk-seeking. Minimum-risk portfolios and beta arbitrage are two examples he provides.
Source: http://abnormalreturns.com

The Snowball: How Compounding Affects Money, Knowledge, and Life

This is a guest post from Robert Brokamp of The Motley Fool. Robert is a Certified Financial Planner and the adviser for The Motley Fool’s Rule Your Retirement service. He contributes one new article to Get Rich Slowly every two weeks.

Happy anniversary to…well, all of us, I guess. This post marks my one-year (and five days) anniversary of being a contributor to Get Rich Slowly. It’s been a hoot.

My very first post was a report from my journey to last year’s Berkshire Hathaway annual meeting. While I didn’t attend this year’s meeting, which occurred two weekends ago, my interest in Warren Buffett’s commentary and biography hasn’t flagged. After all, I’m a Berkshire Hathaway shareholder.

The wealth snowball
This post’s Buffett lesson comes from The Snowball, the recent Buffett biography by Alice Schroeder in which she writes: “Since Warren looked at every dollar as $10 someday, he wasn’t going to hand over a dollar more than he needed to spend.” Buffett apparently was so cheap, he only washed his car when it rained so he wouldn’t have to pay for the water.

Former Washington Post heir and publisher Katherine Graham once asked Buffett for a dime to make a phone call. (Before the advent of cell phones, people had to use these things called phone booths if they wanted to make a call in public — and they didn’t even have Twitter!) Buffett only had a quarter, so the billionaire first went to get change.

Now, we all know that spending a dollar today means we won’t be able to spend it later. We may also allow that a dollar invested today will be worth more years hence, so that we not only delay gratification — we can pay for more of it.

But a dollar saved today leading to $10 someday? That’s an awful lot of compound growth, especially at rates being offered by today’s savings accounts and certificates of deposits.

Yet for Warren Buffett, it turns out that he was underestimating himself. From 1965 through 2009, Berkshire Hathaway stock returned an average 20.3% annually, turning $1 into $4,341. That, ladies and gentlemen, is how you become the richest person in America.

Compounding for mere mortals
But what about the rest of us? Is it reasonable to think an investment today could decuple? (Yes, that’s the word for something that has increased tenfold, and, yes, I had to look it up.) That depends on the return you earn, and how long you earn it.

Below are three charts, assuming different rates of return, initial investments of $100, $500, and $1,000 (which are more representative than $1 of the spending decisions we make nowadays), and the numbers of years the money is invested.

Initial Investment Earns 4% Annually
Years $100 $500 $1,000
5 $122 $608 $1,217
10 $148 $740 $1,480
15 $180 $900 $1,801
20 $219 $1,096 $2,191
25 $267 $1,333 $2,666
30 $324 $1,622 $3,243
Initial Investment Earns 6% Annually
Years $100 $500 $1,000
5 $134 $669 $1,338
10 $179 $895 $1,791
15 $240 $1,198 $2,397
20 $321 $1,604 $3,207
25 $429 $2,146 $4,292
30 $574 $2,872 $5,743
Initial Investment Earns 8% Annually
Years $100 $500 $1,000
5 $147 $735 $1,469
10 $216 $1,079 $2,159
15 $317 $1,586 $3,172
20 $466 $2,330 $4,661
25 $685 $3,424 $6,848
30 $1,006 $5,031 $10,063

In these examples, the only amounts that have increased tenfold are the ones invested for 30 years and earning 8% annually, a return not quite as easy to earn these days as they were in the second half of the last century. Still, the numbers might be compelling, especially for younger folks.

A few additional thoughts about these tables:

  • These numbers don’t take inflation into account. So forgoing $100 today doesn’t mean you’ll buy $1,000 worth of goods at today’s prices; it’ll likely be quite less. But as long as you earn a return that exceeds inflation, you’ll still be able to buy more in the future than you could buy today.
  • While most of us don’t drop $100, $500, or $1,000 on purchases every day, I do find it informative (and occasionally painful) to annualize expenses. Spend $6 every workday on lunch? That’s approximately $1,400 a year. Your cable costing you $100 a month? That’s another $1,200. And that’s after-tax money. In other words, to spend that $1,200, you had to earn $1,600 and then pay $400 in federal and state taxes (assuming a 25% combined rate) to have that $1,200 to spend. If you put that money in a traditional retirement account, you can at least defer the federal and state income taxes (though not the FICA taxes — you still have to pay those).
  • The numbers in the charts reflect a one-time investment, and not continual, regular investments. For example, if you invest $500 every month and earn an average annual 6%, you’d have approximately $500,000 after 30 years.
  • If you’re closer to the day you hope to retire than the last time you pulled an all-nighter, you might be saying, “But I don’t have 30 years for my money to grow!” That may be true for the money you need in the first several years of your retirement, but if you live to the average life expectancy (or longer), you won’t touch some of your money until you’re a decade or two into your retirement. Unless you’re an 85-year-old one-armed chainsaw juggler who smokes, you should plan on some of your money being invested for decades.

If you, like Buffett, find thinking about future values helps being frugal, print out those charts. Put them in your wallet. Wrap them around your credit cards. Post them on your computer monitor about where the “Place your order” button shows up on your favorite e-shoppe. After all, as Alice Schroeder explained in an interview with The Motley Fool, the power of compounding is where the title of her book comes from:

The Snowball is from a saying of Warren’s about life being like a snowball. It is really a metaphor for compounding, for the way that things tend to grow at an exponential rate when they are rolling forward over time. So his money has obviously been like a huge snowball, but it also refers to relationships and to knowledge and all the different things that tend to grow and layer upon each other.

Balancing tomorrow and today
Despite Buffett’s famed frugality, he doesn’t recommend forgoing all of life’s pleasures. As Schroeder explained in another next segment of her Foolish interview, even Buffett recommended that you have to strike a balance between enjoying today and investing (your bucks or your brains) for tomorrow:

He said to me one time, if there is something you really want to do, don’t put it off until you are 70 years old. … Do it now. Don’t worry about how much it costs or things like that, because you are going to enjoy it now. You don’t even know what your health will be like then.

On the other hand, if you are investing in your education and you are learning, you should do that as early as you possibly can, because then it will have time to compound over the longest period. And that the things you do learn and invest in should be knowledge that is cumulative, so that the knowledge builds on itself.

So instead of learning something that might become obsolete tomorrow, like some particular type of software [that no one even uses two years later], choose things that will make you smarter in 10 or 20 years. That lesson is something I use all the time now.

J.D.’s note: While I realize that much of the discussion about compounding involves theoretical, it’s still fascinating. If you start early enough and are disciplined (and things go according to plan), you really can use the power of compounding to build great wealth. But, as Buffett points out, it’s not just money that compounds. Knowledge does, too, as do relationships and experience. The more you do to improve your life today, the better it will be tomorrow.

Source:http://www.getrichslowly.org/blog

Daily Links: Outsourcing, Intentional Default, and The Simple Dollar

It’s been a long time since I share links to other sites. That’s a shame, because there’s a lot of great stuff out there. Lately, I’ve been impressed with some articles from some of your fellow GRS readers.

For example, Tim at the Seattle Bubble blog just posted an article on misguided ethics and walking away from a mortgage. We’ve had several discussions around here about the morality of defaulting on a mortgage. There are a lot of GRS readers who think that defaulting is reprehensible. Tim lays out the case in favor of intentional default. “A mortgage is merely a legal contract, not some sort of sacred vow,” he writes. It’s a fascinating article, with 181 fascinating responses.

In February, Erica Douglass shared a controversial guest post with us about outsourcing life when you’re financially secure. She argues that if you can afford it, it’s actually very sensible to pay other people to do things for you. Over at her own site, Erica has just written an article to answer the question, “Is outsourcing worth the effort?” This will be of interest to a very small portion of GRS readers, but I think some of you will find this helpful.

Finally, Trent at The Simple Dollar posted several great articles recently, including:

That’s it for this afternoon, folks! Time to enjoy some of that rare Oregon sunshine

Source:http://www.getrichslowly.org/blog

CR Index: You're Buying More, Less Worried

Consumer Reports is out with the latest edition of its economic-health tracker, the CR Index, and the news is generally positive, with gains in jobs and consumer spending, and declines in stress. But that doesn't mean it's time to break out the bubbly: “We are seeing modest improvements across our indices since April, which demonstrate that consumers are starting the long slog out of this historic recession,” said Ed Farrell, a director of the Consumer Reports National Research Center. “But a full recovery will require a substantial period of growth for consumer confidence to fully take hold.”

According to CR:

The personal financial status of the American consumer is on the rise, according to the latest results from the Consumer Reports Index. The most significant improvement is in the job market. The Employment Index stands at 50.6, up from 50.4 the prior month. In the past 30 days, 6 percent of Americans have started a new job, up from 5 percent in April and 4.6 percent a year ago. The proportion of Americans who have lost their job in the past 30 days is 4.9 percent, well down from the recent high of 7.8 percent in October, 2009.

Americans also faced fewer financial difficulties in April. The Consumer Reports Trouble Tracker Index has improved significantly, falling to 53.0 from its spike in April of 63.5. Fewer people had problems paying their medical bills, had negative changes in their credit card terms, or had trouble paying major bills (excluding mortgages).

Source:http://consumerist.com/2010/05/youre-buying-more-less-worried---unless-youre-in-the-south.html

What Happens When You Eject A NY Times Reporter From Your Restaurant

Ron Leiber writes the "Your Money" column for the New York Times. On Saturday, he, along with his party, was ejected from a restaurant by the chef. Mr. Leiber wrote about it on the Times food blog and now the restaurant is getting crank calls according to Gothamist.

The nonsense began when the chef started yelling at an employee. That the yelling occurred neither man disputes.

Here's how Mr. Leiber describes the incident:

And without much forethought, I pushed back my chair and walked through the open doorway of the kitchen.

I don’t remember exactly what I said, though I did not raise my voice to the point beyond where people in the kitchen could hear it. I told the chef that his behavior was making me and others uncomfortable. I let him know that I thought it was mean. And I asked him to cut it out. I don’t remember exactly what he said in response, but whatever it was, I found it irritating enough that I reminded him that I was paying to eat there and told him again to stop berating his staff at that volume.

Maybe 20 seconds after I had returned to my seat, he approached the table. He apologized, barely, and then let me know that he thought it was incredibly rude of me to come into his kitchen and tell him how to do his job. I repeated the fact that he had been ruining my dinner. But his yelling was all in the interest of maintaining quality, he said.

“I think it’s time for you to go,” he said.

“Are you kicking me out?” I asked.

“Yes,” he replied.

And now the chef, who did not know Mr. Lieber was a reporter, tells his side to Gothamist:
The picture that people are getting is that of me standing over a helpless animal screaming and kicking and [Lieber] comes into the kitchen and prevents all this from happening and saves him. That's not what was happening at all... While I was yelling I slammed my hand on a kitchen table and the rack that holds the tickets was loose and came crashing down, which probably made it more dramatic. Then he came in to tell me to keep it down because I was bothering him, not because he was trying to protect anybody. And he's turning into a martyr here. And I just want to make it clear that I am not a bully. I am not a psycho or a bully. Am I passionate? Yes.

And now Lieber again:

When I called him on Monday to tell him I was writing this post about the evening, Mr. Forgione, in fact, said that I had scolded him like a child on Saturday night. “First and foremost, you came into my kitchen and spoke to me very disrespectfully in front of my cooks,” he said. “The kitchen is a sacred space.” He told me that my reply to his attempts to explain why he was yelling, while I was in the kitchen was, “We’re not interested.” That sounds about right, since we hadn’t come to the restaurant to listen to him yell repeatedly at his staff about whatever it was that he thought they were doing wrong.

That wasn’t what got us kicked out though, according to Mr. Forgione. He claimed that he didn’t decide to ask us to leave until he explained to us tableside that his yelling was all in the interest of making everything perfect. “Well you aren’t,” he remembers me saying. “And then,” he continued, “you waved a hand in my direction as if I was an annoying bug. Someone who acts like that in my restaurant, I would never serve.”

Gothamist asked the chef if he would apologize:

No way... He just decided it was okay to come into the kitchen. It has nothing to do with it being "sacred." It's just employees only, it's a kitchen. He stuck his head into doorway, waved his finger at me, and told me to keep it down because he wasn't interested. And I've never heard my kitchen so quiet! Everybody just kind of looked at each other like, 'What the hell was that and who the hell was that guy?' It was the most bizarre thing, just like six seconds of silence, like a record screeching. I took a deep breath, calmly walked to the table, and politely tried to explain why I was so upset. And he waved his hand at me and said, 'Whatever you're doing in there it's obviously not helping.' I apologized to all three of his guests and said, because of him, all three of you have to leave. I did not apologize to him and I will not apologize to him.

Source:http://consumerist.com/2010/05/what-happens-when-you-eject-a-ny-times-reporter-from-your-restaurant.html

Facebook Can Warn You When Someone Else Logs Into Your Account

By the time someone hacks into your Facebook account and sends all of your friends plaintive messages about being mugged in London, it's too late to do anything about it. However, Facebook does have an early-warning system of sorts. Using a security setting, you can have the service alert you whenever your account is accessed from another location, giving you a chance to (hopefully) force the intruder out and change your password.


The somewhat buried feature (it's under Account Settings, not Privacy Settings) lets you register your computer, and any other devices you use to access Facebook. After that, any time someone logs into your account via an unauthorized device, you'll get an email and/or text message. Of course, it would be even better if you could simply block access from any unauthorized computer, but then you'd never be able to check your wall from a friend's house or borrowed phone, and who wants to live with limitations like that?

source: http://consumerist.com/2010/05/facebook-can-warn-you-when-someone-else-logs-into-your-account.html

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