Will You Add?
#1 in Business Subscribe Email Print

You are here: Home > Finance > Stocks Mutual Funds > Learn to Invest Money: Protect Your Stocks During Turbulent Times, Part I (May 18, 2006)

Tags

  • geographically
  • previous
  • brazil australia
  • market corrections
  • overwhelming majority

  • Links

  • Robinson Crusoe and the Middle Station of Life
  • The Big Advantages of Small Business
  • How To Master The Art-And-Science Of Making Your First $1000 On The Internet
  • Will You Add? - Learn to Invest Money: Protect Your Stocks During Turbulent Times, Part I (May 18, 2006)

    The 3 Unknown Steps of Marketing Success
    To be your own marketing expert you first need to know where to begin. It's no good learning how to be a good copywriter, if you don't know what medium is best to promote your work through.So the first step of marketing success is understanding what strategies are available for you in your business.From my own years of research I have found 74 different ways to generate a potential customer for every industry and that doesn’t include the dozens of ways to generate inquiries online. The 74 strategies are all used for offline promotion.I'll just share with you a few of the best, yet least known strategies here below.Do you know what strategic alliance, host beneficiary and proactive referral strategies are? What about piggyback invoice mailings, reverse host beneficiary, invitation closed door sales, loyalty programs and school newsletter ads?Of these strategies the ones I like the best are proactive referral systems, where you offer an incentive to your customers soon after they buy, to refer other customers to you and promote this through a letter to your customer within days after buying. This works a treat!One of my other favourites is a strategic alliance whereby you find a business that has a similar target market to your own and you meet with them to agree to send customers to each other. This could be with business cards, brochures, s
    age. But right now, bonds are probably one of the riskiest investments you could own. Bond prices go down as interest rates climb higher. Most likely interest rates will head higher from here, so that means the face value of bonds will decline. Bond prices are linked to U.S. dollars. The dollar is incredibly weak now and will possibly even become significantly weaker. And then there is credit risk. Accounting scandals are uncovered everyday.

    And in case you’ve forgotten the “high quality” accompanies accused and investigated for fraudulent activity, in 2001 and 2002 alone, these companies included Adelphia, AOL Time Warner, Arthur Anderson, Bristol-Myers Squibb, Citigroup, ImClone, General Electric, JP Morgan, Lucent, Parmalat, Freddie Mac, Duke Energy, Dynergy, Enron, Global Crossing, Halliburton, K-Mart, Merck, Qwest Communications, Reliant Energy, Tyco, Worldcom, and Xerox to name a few. All were accused of falsifying their financials to make revenues or cash flows look better than they actually were. More recently, Ford, AIG, and Hyundai come to mind.

    Think about how many more people would invest in an opportunity if they knew it was a moderate risk, high return opportunity versus a high risk, high return opportunity. To give you an example of exactly what I mean, let’s consider the following situation.

    Opportunity A: Invest $10,000 in company ABC. Risk of investment: Low. Maximum upside: $1,000. Maximum downside: Capped at $1,500 by using a stop-loss of 15% (means that the stock automatically sells if it loses 15%).

    Opportunity B: Invest $10,000 in a gold mining company. Risk of investment: Above average. Maximum upside: $25,000 to $100,000. Maximum downside: Capped at $4,000 by using a stop loss of

    eBay: Focus Your Sales By Sharpening Your Image
    Have you ever wondered why that item you had for sale on eBay didn't sell? Just remember that one picture can be worth a thousand words!This article applies to all sellers on eBay, no matter you sell, no matter how frequently. I'm talking about perhaps the one most important thing on any eBay auction lot: the picture. Just think about it for a minute and you'll see what I mean. Better still, log on to eBay and choose any category and just look - really look - at what you see.I've had the benefit of some considerable amount of marketing experience in the past, especially when presenting products for sale on the internet. Styles change but one thing remains constant - if a prospective customer can't see what you have to offer, they won't buy. Period.I have lost count long ago of the number of items I've seen on eBay with no gallery image and even with no image at all. Let me ask you what you yourself do when scanning the lots in your chosen category and I bet you do exactly the same as I (and who knows how many others) do: you skip the items with no picture.Why? Well, it's just a basic human response. We are geared to notice form and colour only second to noticing movement. It's something that runs very deeply in everyone and goes way, way back to the time when noticing these things was a very handy way of avoiding being eaten. Whilst we don't have that p
    This is a special article in response to the global market’s recent correction.

    In the U.S., the Dow is down 4% , the Nasdaq about 6%, and the S&P 500 about 5% in a week. European stocks posted their biggest drop since May 2003, and the FTSE 100 in the UK had its biggest 2 day loss in 3 years. On the other hand, in Asia, as of May 11th, the HK Hang Seng index was up 22%, the South Korean index up 55%, the Australian markets up 31%, and China was up 50% before these markets also corrected with the global market correction in the past 7 days.

    In addition, the U.S. is allocating $2 billion very soon to shore up its borders, major conflict still is going on in Iraq and Afghanistan, and Venezuela has increased the top royalty rates on oil to 33% from 16.67% after raising this rate from just 1% in October, 2004. In Bolivia, Evo Morales has followed his friend Chavez’s lead, and nationalized his country’s oil and natural gas resources. In Mexico, political unrest, according to subcomandante Marcos, is the worst since 1994 as it nears its next Presidential election. In Iran, the threat of nuclear confrontation with Israel and the United States looms, and returning to the U.S., record trade deficits that won’t turn around any time soon, a falling dollar, and another bad expected hurricane season (due to global warming) is what lies ahead.

    So What is an Investor to Do?

    Well, sad to say, but I don’t believe the worst is over. The temporary bounce we received mid-week was not the bounce I believe that has yet to come. I still believe that we will see a sharp, steep bounce sometime soon in response to the oversold market. But following that, I still believe that we may see the worst to come. Why? Just read the paragraph above. So in response, I have been shifting significant portions of my client’s into several areas for protection. If you had remained fully invested in these markets before they started tanking I would not recommend panicking and selling out now.

    The biggest mistake individual investors make is panicking on market corrections and then buying back in after the market bounces back significantly. That’s the worst thing you could do. Sell low and buy high, but yet millions of investors will make that mistake in response to this weeks actions. But yet if you are mainly invested in Europe and the U.S., you need to rebalance your portfolio now because you will be punished for such short sightedness in the remainder of 2006. In fact, if you liquidated a good deal of assets before the plunge, I would look to buy partial (but not full) positions in some stocks now as a good deal of stocks are on sale right now. It pays to be brave when others are afraid (I think Warren Buffet said that).

    Recently a new client transferred over a large portfolio and I immediately liquidated as much as I could, luckily liquidating before the second big drop in the global markets this week. His previous advisor did not own a single stock on the Brazilian, Canadian, London, Australian, Chinese, Mexican stock market. Not even one ADR either. Every single stock he owned was listed on the NYSE or S&P 500. These are the types of portfolios that will get punished over the remainder of the year. I recently read an article about a big producer at another American firm that recently shifted 70% of all his client’s assets into China, but all through Chinese mutual funds. I hate mutual funds, and the thought of owning mutual funds in emerging markets (but that’s an article for another time). People should always own stocks, not mutual funds. Mutual funds are the lazy way out and you’ll get punished for being lazy. It’s just not the way to benefit from these rapid growth markets.

    So where should your money go? Due to all the political unrest, I’m looking at the defense sector. Due to continued globalization and the threat of new epidemics, I’m also looking at the healthcare and pharmaceutical sector. And due to all the geopolitical unrest, I’m looking at precious metals. Geographically, I’m looking for continuing opportunities in China of course, as well as some in Brazil, Australia, the U.K. and Canada. And the only U.S. companies I’d invest in other than the defense sector would be companies that have very wide global expansion initiatives. But I can’t discuss all of these ideas, so I’ll discuss one of my favorites –Precious metals.

    PRECIOUS METALS

    I’m not really sure but large investment firms by and large seem to ignore year after year, precious metals such as gold, silver, palladium, and others. However, in turbulent times, this asset class is one of the most valuable.

    It’s not that the news doesn’t report on it. In fact, every night, in financial news reports, the closing price of commodities including gold is reported. However, at the end of the day, very few people ever seem to benefit from investing in the stocks (and not the commodities themselves) that benefit the most during precious metal bull markets.

    LESSON #1: The average person does not understand the upside of investing in metals because it has never properly been explained to them

    Many myths surround metals that cloud the truth about their value as an investment vehicle. Several of the most widespread myths include the following:

    (1)Gold, silver and metals are risky speculative investments.

    (2)The best way to buy gold and silver is to physically own the commodity.

    (3)Gold is only an investment accessible to the extremely rich.

    The definition of speculation according to Webster is the following: “the assumption of unusual business risk in hopes of obtaining commensurate gain”. Speculation is one of the most incorrectly used terms in investing. Investors in general stay away from trying to profit from bull markets in precious metals because of its speculative stigma. However, what is never explained to most investors is that the great majority of risk can be mitigated by employing intelligent analysis and intelligent buying and selling strategies.

    Therefore, these investment opportunities should not be rated speculative but more accurately explained as moderate risk, high return opportunities. If you don’t perform intelligent analysis and intelligent buying and selling strategies, then investing in large company stocks, typically described as the “safest” of all investments, can become highly speculative as well. Large companies such as energy conglomerate Enron went belly up and investors lost every penny they had invested in this company. Stocks and bonds invested in “safe” companies such as Ford and Hyundai became risky this year when accounting scandals were uncovered that placed these company’s credit ratings on shaky ground.

    Bonds are always described by financial consultants as “safe” investments and financial consultants will buy bonds for the overwhelming majority of their clients if they are over 60 years of age. But right now, bonds are probably one of the riskiest investments you could own. Bond prices go down as interest rates climb higher. Most likely interest rates will head higher from here, so that means the face value of bonds will decline. Bond prices are linked to U.S. dollars. The dollar is incredibly weak now and will possibly even become significantly weaker. And then there is credit risk. Accounting scandals are uncovered everyday.

    And in case you’ve forgotten the “high quality” accompanies accused and investigated for fraudulent activity, in 2001 and 2002 alone, these companies included Adelphia, AOL Time Warner, Arthur Anderson, Bristol-Myers Squibb, Citigroup, ImClone, General Electric, JP Morgan, Lucent, Parmalat, Freddie Mac, Duke Energy, Dynergy, Enron, Global Crossing, Halliburton, K-Mart, Merck, Qwest Communications, Reliant Energy, Tyco, Worldcom, and Xerox to name a few. All were accused of falsifying their financials to make revenues or cash flows look better than they actually were. More recently, Ford, AIG, and Hyundai come to mind.

    Think about how many more people would invest in an opportunity if they knew it was a moderate risk, high return opportunity versus a high risk, high return opportunity. To give you an example of exactly what I mean, let’s consider the following situation.

    Opportunity A: Invest $10,000 in company ABC. Risk of investment: Low. Maximum upside: $1,000. Maximum downside: Capped at $1,500 by using a stop-loss of 15% (means that the stock automatically sells if it loses 15%).

    Opportunity B: Invest $10,000 in a gold mining company. Risk of investment: Above average. Maximum upside: $25,000 to $100,000. Maximum downside: Capped at $4,000 by using a stop loss of 4

    Googletestad and the SEO Bug
    Googletestad has become an internet keyword sensation with over 70,000 hits a day on search engines like Google and MSN. While it is not immediately clear what the word means or why it is popular, people are creating buzz that it is a good work for search engine optimization.Googletestad has spurred new buzzwords like "google googletestad monitor query" or "google monitor query or googletestad" while may seem nonsensical, they are used to best competing search engine optimization keywords.To learn more about search engine optimization, there are some good books that can be found in book stores or over the internet about keywords and search engine optimization. These books are great resources for finding all you need to know about how SEO works.While the buzz of googletestad may fall, it's clear that such words creative incentive for others to make up their own buzz words or keywords. Most searches of googletestad will result in sites that don't offer any information about it, but this page is probably the most comprehensive yet. It's really all about search engine optimization.Critics of SEO state that this method pollutes the internet with articles that have nothing to do with reality."I'm tired of all the crap on the internet. Now nearly half of the search results I get from Google or MSN are blatant spam -- what's the use of the internet if it'
    d the paragraph above. So in response, I have been shifting significant portions of my client’s into several areas for protection. If you had remained fully invested in these markets before they started tanking I would not recommend panicking and selling out now.

    The biggest mistake individual investors make is panicking on market corrections and then buying back in after the market bounces back significantly. That’s the worst thing you could do. Sell low and buy high, but yet millions of investors will make that mistake in response to this weeks actions. But yet if you are mainly invested in Europe and the U.S., you need to rebalance your portfolio now because you will be punished for such short sightedness in the remainder of 2006. In fact, if you liquidated a good deal of assets before the plunge, I would look to buy partial (but not full) positions in some stocks now as a good deal of stocks are on sale right now. It pays to be brave when others are afraid (I think Warren Buffet said that).

    Recently a new client transferred over a large portfolio and I immediately liquidated as much as I could, luckily liquidating before the second big drop in the global markets this week. His previous advisor did not own a single stock on the Brazilian, Canadian, London, Australian, Chinese, Mexican stock market. Not even one ADR either. Every single stock he owned was listed on the NYSE or S&P 500. These are the types of portfolios that will get punished over the remainder of the year. I recently read an article about a big producer at another American firm that recently shifted 70% of all his client’s assets into China, but all through Chinese mutual funds. I hate mutual funds, and the thought of owning mutual funds in emerging markets (but that’s an article for another time). People should always own stocks, not mutual funds. Mutual funds are the lazy way out and you’ll get punished for being lazy. It’s just not the way to benefit from these rapid growth markets.

    So where should your money go? Due to all the political unrest, I’m looking at the defense sector. Due to continued globalization and the threat of new epidemics, I’m also looking at the healthcare and pharmaceutical sector. And due to all the geopolitical unrest, I’m looking at precious metals. Geographically, I’m looking for continuing opportunities in China of course, as well as some in Brazil, Australia, the U.K. and Canada. And the only U.S. companies I’d invest in other than the defense sector would be companies that have very wide global expansion initiatives. But I can’t discuss all of these ideas, so I’ll discuss one of my favorites –Precious metals.

    PRECIOUS METALS

    I’m not really sure but large investment firms by and large seem to ignore year after year, precious metals such as gold, silver, palladium, and others. However, in turbulent times, this asset class is one of the most valuable.

    It’s not that the news doesn’t report on it. In fact, every night, in financial news reports, the closing price of commodities including gold is reported. However, at the end of the day, very few people ever seem to benefit from investing in the stocks (and not the commodities themselves) that benefit the most during precious metal bull markets.

    LESSON #1: The average person does not understand the upside of investing in metals because it has never properly been explained to them

    Many myths surround metals that cloud the truth about their value as an investment vehicle. Several of the most widespread myths include the following:

    (1)Gold, silver and metals are risky speculative investments.

    (2)The best way to buy gold and silver is to physically own the commodity.

    (3)Gold is only an investment accessible to the extremely rich.

    The definition of speculation according to Webster is the following: “the assumption of unusual business risk in hopes of obtaining commensurate gain”. Speculation is one of the most incorrectly used terms in investing. Investors in general stay away from trying to profit from bull markets in precious metals because of its speculative stigma. However, what is never explained to most investors is that the great majority of risk can be mitigated by employing intelligent analysis and intelligent buying and selling strategies.

    Therefore, these investment opportunities should not be rated speculative but more accurately explained as moderate risk, high return opportunities. If you don’t perform intelligent analysis and intelligent buying and selling strategies, then investing in large company stocks, typically described as the “safest” of all investments, can become highly speculative as well. Large companies such as energy conglomerate Enron went belly up and investors lost every penny they had invested in this company. Stocks and bonds invested in “safe” companies such as Ford and Hyundai became risky this year when accounting scandals were uncovered that placed these company’s credit ratings on shaky ground.

    Bonds are always described by financial consultants as “safe” investments and financial consultants will buy bonds for the overwhelming majority of their clients if they are over 60 years of age. But right now, bonds are probably one of the riskiest investments you could own. Bond prices go down as interest rates climb higher. Most likely interest rates will head higher from here, so that means the face value of bonds will decline. Bond prices are linked to U.S. dollars. The dollar is incredibly weak now and will possibly even become significantly weaker. And then there is credit risk. Accounting scandals are uncovered everyday.

    And in case you’ve forgotten the “high quality” accompanies accused and investigated for fraudulent activity, in 2001 and 2002 alone, these companies included Adelphia, AOL Time Warner, Arthur Anderson, Bristol-Myers Squibb, Citigroup, ImClone, General Electric, JP Morgan, Lucent, Parmalat, Freddie Mac, Duke Energy, Dynergy, Enron, Global Crossing, Halliburton, K-Mart, Merck, Qwest Communications, Reliant Energy, Tyco, Worldcom, and Xerox to name a few. All were accused of falsifying their financials to make revenues or cash flows look better than they actually were. More recently, Ford, AIG, and Hyundai come to mind.

    Think about how many more people would invest in an opportunity if they knew it was a moderate risk, high return opportunity versus a high risk, high return opportunity. To give you an example of exactly what I mean, let’s consider the following situation.

    Opportunity A: Invest $10,000 in company ABC. Risk of investment: Low. Maximum upside: $1,000. Maximum downside: Capped at $1,500 by using a stop-loss of 15% (means that the stock automatically sells if it loses 15%).

    Opportunity B: Invest $10,000 in a gold mining company. Risk of investment: Above average. Maximum upside: $25,000 to $100,000. Maximum downside: Capped at $4,000 by using a stop loss of

    Tax Deferral Strategies
    For years up until the burst of the bubble, investors needed only to be right about which stock to buy. Should they buy XYZ, ABC or PDQ? The philosophy at the time led investors to believe that the purchase was the key to success. The question was not “which stock will go up?” but “which stock will go up more?” It was a time of buy and hold and the concept of sell was often overlooked and infrequently used. This remarkable bull market phase was characterized by large moves, and also by some degree of investor complacency – in that they just bought, held, and waited. When the bubble burst, stocks became much more volatile, making it too dangerous to just buy, hold and wait. As quickly as an investor had a profit, the market could turn and they would suddenly be faced with a loss. The time of buy and hold had ended and the time of buy and sell had begun. The importance of taking a quick profit now meant the difference between profit and loss. The shrewd investor took profits quickly, instead of waiting and having those profits disappear. However, one of the problems investors then faced was higher taxes, in the form of short term capital gains. Investors who sold their stock before holding for a one year period were hit with these higher short term capital
    g markets (but that’s an article for another time). People should always own stocks, not mutual funds. Mutual funds are the lazy way out and you’ll get punished for being lazy. It’s just not the way to benefit from these rapid growth markets.

    So where should your money go? Due to all the political unrest, I’m looking at the defense sector. Due to continued globalization and the threat of new epidemics, I’m also looking at the healthcare and pharmaceutical sector. And due to all the geopolitical unrest, I’m looking at precious metals. Geographically, I’m looking for continuing opportunities in China of course, as well as some in Brazil, Australia, the U.K. and Canada. And the only U.S. companies I’d invest in other than the defense sector would be companies that have very wide global expansion initiatives. But I can’t discuss all of these ideas, so I’ll discuss one of my favorites –Precious metals.

    PRECIOUS METALS

    I’m not really sure but large investment firms by and large seem to ignore year after year, precious metals such as gold, silver, palladium, and others. However, in turbulent times, this asset class is one of the most valuable.

    It’s not that the news doesn’t report on it. In fact, every night, in financial news reports, the closing price of commodities including gold is reported. However, at the end of the day, very few people ever seem to benefit from investing in the stocks (and not the commodities themselves) that benefit the most during precious metal bull markets.

    LESSON #1: The average person does not understand the upside of investing in metals because it has never properly been explained to them

    Many myths surround metals that cloud the truth about their value as an investment vehicle. Several of the most widespread myths include the following:

    (1)Gold, silver and metals are risky speculative investments.

    (2)The best way to buy gold and silver is to physically own the commodity.

    (3)Gold is only an investment accessible to the extremely rich.

    The definition of speculation according to Webster is the following: “the assumption of unusual business risk in hopes of obtaining commensurate gain”. Speculation is one of the most incorrectly used terms in investing. Investors in general stay away from trying to profit from bull markets in precious metals because of its speculative stigma. However, what is never explained to most investors is that the great majority of risk can be mitigated by employing intelligent analysis and intelligent buying and selling strategies.

    Therefore, these investment opportunities should not be rated speculative but more accurately explained as moderate risk, high return opportunities. If you don’t perform intelligent analysis and intelligent buying and selling strategies, then investing in large company stocks, typically described as the “safest” of all investments, can become highly speculative as well. Large companies such as energy conglomerate Enron went belly up and investors lost every penny they had invested in this company. Stocks and bonds invested in “safe” companies such as Ford and Hyundai became risky this year when accounting scandals were uncovered that placed these company’s credit ratings on shaky ground.

    Bonds are always described by financial consultants as “safe” investments and financial consultants will buy bonds for the overwhelming majority of their clients if they are over 60 years of age. But right now, bonds are probably one of the riskiest investments you could own. Bond prices go down as interest rates climb higher. Most likely interest rates will head higher from here, so that means the face value of bonds will decline. Bond prices are linked to U.S. dollars. The dollar is incredibly weak now and will possibly even become significantly weaker. And then there is credit risk. Accounting scandals are uncovered everyday.

    And in case you’ve forgotten the “high quality” accompanies accused and investigated for fraudulent activity, in 2001 and 2002 alone, these companies included Adelphia, AOL Time Warner, Arthur Anderson, Bristol-Myers Squibb, Citigroup, ImClone, General Electric, JP Morgan, Lucent, Parmalat, Freddie Mac, Duke Energy, Dynergy, Enron, Global Crossing, Halliburton, K-Mart, Merck, Qwest Communications, Reliant Energy, Tyco, Worldcom, and Xerox to name a few. All were accused of falsifying their financials to make revenues or cash flows look better than they actually were. More recently, Ford, AIG, and Hyundai come to mind.

    Think about how many more people would invest in an opportunity if they knew it was a moderate risk, high return opportunity versus a high risk, high return opportunity. To give you an example of exactly what I mean, let’s consider the following situation.

    Opportunity A: Invest $10,000 in company ABC. Risk of investment: Low. Maximum upside: $1,000. Maximum downside: Capped at $1,500 by using a stop-loss of 15% (means that the stock automatically sells if it loses 15%).

    Opportunity B: Invest $10,000 in a gold mining company. Risk of investment: Above average. Maximum upside: $25,000 to $100,000. Maximum downside: Capped at $4,000 by using a stop loss of

    How Long are your Donors? Improve Donor Tenure and You'll Boost Fundraising Request Letter Revenue
    How long do most of your donors contribute to your organization before they walk away? One year? Five? Ten? You should know.Direct mail fundraising, like all effective fundraising, is about raising friends rather than raising funds. Raising a friend is always more important in the long term (the only term worth considering in fundraising) than raising a dollar. And losing a donor is always worse than losing a dollar.Which means you must pay as much attention to your donor numbers as you do to your donation numbers. Response rate, average gift and cost-to-raise-a-dollar are donation numbers. They tell you how you are doing as far as funds are concerned. But donor attrition rate, renewal rate and average tenure are donor numbers. They tell you how well you are doing as far as your friendships are concerned.Average donor tenure is a vital number to watch. Simply put, your average donor tenure is the length of time, measured in years or months, that your average donor gives to your organization before stopping. The for-profit world watches this number. You should, too.Learn from the for-profit world A lady at my church described to me her work as an insurance sales agent. She explained that most agents make a commission when they sell an insurance policy and make another commission when their customer renews that policy, usually a yea
    about their value as an investment vehicle. Several of the most widespread myths include the following:

    (1)Gold, silver and metals are risky speculative investments.

    (2)The best way to buy gold and silver is to physically own the commodity.

    (3)Gold is only an investment accessible to the extremely rich.

    The definition of speculation according to Webster is the following: “the assumption of unusual business risk in hopes of obtaining commensurate gain”. Speculation is one of the most incorrectly used terms in investing. Investors in general stay away from trying to profit from bull markets in precious metals because of its speculative stigma. However, what is never explained to most investors is that the great majority of risk can be mitigated by employing intelligent analysis and intelligent buying and selling strategies.

    Therefore, these investment opportunities should not be rated speculative but more accurately explained as moderate risk, high return opportunities. If you don’t perform intelligent analysis and intelligent buying and selling strategies, then investing in large company stocks, typically described as the “safest” of all investments, can become highly speculative as well. Large companies such as energy conglomerate Enron went belly up and investors lost every penny they had invested in this company. Stocks and bonds invested in “safe” companies such as Ford and Hyundai became risky this year when accounting scandals were uncovered that placed these company’s credit ratings on shaky ground.

    Bonds are always described by financial consultants as “safe” investments and financial consultants will buy bonds for the overwhelming majority of their clients if they are over 60 years of age. But right now, bonds are probably one of the riskiest investments you could own. Bond prices go down as interest rates climb higher. Most likely interest rates will head higher from here, so that means the face value of bonds will decline. Bond prices are linked to U.S. dollars. The dollar is incredibly weak now and will possibly even become significantly weaker. And then there is credit risk. Accounting scandals are uncovered everyday.

    And in case you’ve forgotten the “high quality” accompanies accused and investigated for fraudulent activity, in 2001 and 2002 alone, these companies included Adelphia, AOL Time Warner, Arthur Anderson, Bristol-Myers Squibb, Citigroup, ImClone, General Electric, JP Morgan, Lucent, Parmalat, Freddie Mac, Duke Energy, Dynergy, Enron, Global Crossing, Halliburton, K-Mart, Merck, Qwest Communications, Reliant Energy, Tyco, Worldcom, and Xerox to name a few. All were accused of falsifying their financials to make revenues or cash flows look better than they actually were. More recently, Ford, AIG, and Hyundai come to mind.

    Think about how many more people would invest in an opportunity if they knew it was a moderate risk, high return opportunity versus a high risk, high return opportunity. To give you an example of exactly what I mean, let’s consider the following situation.

    Opportunity A: Invest $10,000 in company ABC. Risk of investment: Low. Maximum upside: $1,000. Maximum downside: Capped at $1,500 by using a stop-loss of 15% (means that the stock automatically sells if it loses 15%).

    Opportunity B: Invest $10,000 in a gold mining company. Risk of investment: Above average. Maximum upside: $25,000 to $100,000. Maximum downside: Capped at $4,000 by using a stop loss of

    Logo Designers Would Give Michael Jordan a Run for His Money. Take Control of Your Design Experience
    A waste paper basket is surrounded by a smattering of scrunched up balls of paper. A hush falls over the studio as the creative director takes aim at the miniature basket ball hoop hanging delicately over the bin. He aims and fires from a distance of 2 metres. After the whooping and high fives have finally died down, the studio resumes back to some normality. A junior designer rummages through the bin to locate the winning paper ball as it did, coincidentally, have his latest logo creation on it that was waiting for a critique from the creative director - hmmmmm.The excitement, tension and ulcer inducing stress of putting that latent entrepreneurial flair into practice can bring with it decisions that were never really considered at the time of inception. One such area is the translation of the essence of your business into an identifiable brand.So many of us have left this crucial decision to the so called "experts", the designers and think tanks that can turn seed capital into nothing more than a grain of sand. You alone know your business better than anybody. You are the one that spent night and day turning the dream into a reality. You are the one that will raise and nurture your business to the level of Bransonesque proportions. The way that other businesses and consumers relate to your business through your brand is crucial and you need to control this p
    age. But right now, bonds are probably one of the riskiest investments you could own. Bond prices go down as interest rates climb higher. Most likely interest rates will head higher from here, so that means the face value of bonds will decline. Bond prices are linked to U.S. dollars. The dollar is incredibly weak now and will possibly even become significantly weaker. And then there is credit risk. Accounting scandals are uncovered everyday.

    And in case you’ve forgotten the “high quality” accompanies accused and investigated for fraudulent activity, in 2001 and 2002 alone, these companies included Adelphia, AOL Time Warner, Arthur Anderson, Bristol-Myers Squibb, Citigroup, ImClone, General Electric, JP Morgan, Lucent, Parmalat, Freddie Mac, Duke Energy, Dynergy, Enron, Global Crossing, Halliburton, K-Mart, Merck, Qwest Communications, Reliant Energy, Tyco, Worldcom, and Xerox to name a few. All were accused of falsifying their financials to make revenues or cash flows look better than they actually were. More recently, Ford, AIG, and Hyundai come to mind.

    Think about how many more people would invest in an opportunity if they knew it was a moderate risk, high return opportunity versus a high risk, high return opportunity. To give you an example of exactly what I mean, let’s consider the following situation.

    Opportunity A: Invest $10,000 in company ABC. Risk of investment: Low. Maximum upside: $1,000. Maximum downside: Capped at $1,500 by using a stop-loss of 15% (means that the stock automatically sells if it loses 15%).

    Opportunity B: Invest $10,000 in a gold mining company. Risk of investment: Above average. Maximum upside: $25,000 to $100,000. Maximum downside: Capped at $4,000 by using a stop loss of 40%.

    With Opportunity B, a greater downside risk exists but it also possesses a much much greater potential upside. Now even if we factor in the greater risk of Opportunity B, estimating that the downside loss scenario is twice as likely to happen (40%) when compared to Opportunity A (20%), the risk-adjusted numbers now look like this.

    Risk-adjusted loss, Opportunity A: $1,500 * 20% = $300

    Risk-adjusted loss, Opportunity B: $4,000 * 40% = $1,600

    So on a risk-adjusted basis, for an additional risk of $1,300, you gain upside of $24,000 to $99,000 on potential return. Most people, if presented with an investment correctly in this manner, would take advantage of several Opportunity B type investments because of its much better risk/ reward equation. It wouldn’t be wise to engage in many opportunities like this, but several wagers such as these are more likely to pay off than not.

    Myth (2) is also a reason most average investors don’t invest in gold and precious metals. Many people believe that one must physically buy gold and silver bullions to benefit from rising gold and silver prices and don’t want to deal with the hassle of safekeeping and buying bullions. However, now there are gold and silver ETFs (Exchange traded funds) that basically mimic the price of gold and silver. But even so, I still don’t believe it’s the best way to benefit from the uncertainty in the markets and in the geo-political sphere.

    Owning gold and silver coins, rare coins that are in demand, is much better than owning physical gold or silver or the ETFs, because rare coins always appreciate in price over time and are often worth many many more times the cost of the actual gold and silver in the coins. So a gold coin that is worth $2,000 in underlying gold may sell for $8,000 or $10,000. This probably is the single best way to capitalize on precious metal bull markets, NOT buying actual gold or silver or the gold or silver ETFs. The second best way is to buy gold mining companies. Gold and silver mining companies often appreciate many more times the cost of their underlying asset during precious metal bull markets so are often a much better alternative to profit from a bull market in metals.

    In the second part of this article, I’ll review the final two lessons about investing in precious metals.

    © 2006 Global Market Opportunities

    HTTP = HTML link (for blogs, profiles,phorums):
    <a href="http://www.atriclecheck.com/article/117252/atriclecheck-Learn-to-Invest-Money-Protect-Your-Stocks-During-Turbulent-Times-Part-I-May-18-2006.html">Learn to Invest Money: Protect Your Stocks During Turbulent Times, Part I (May 18, 2006)</a>

    BB link (for phorums):
    [url=http://www.atriclecheck.com/article/117252/atriclecheck-Learn-to-Invest-Money-Protect-Your-Stocks-During-Turbulent-Times-Part-I-May-18-2006.html]Learn to Invest Money: Protect Your Stocks During Turbulent Times, Part I (May 18, 2006)[/url]

    Related Articles:

    Discover The Insights Of Work At Home Assembly Jobs

    Why Do They Buy?

    Make Money on eBay - It's About Buying the Right Products

    Bookmark it: del.icio.us digg.com reddit.com netvouz.com google.com yahoo.com technorati.com furl.net bloglines.com socialdust.com ma.gnolia.com newsvine.com slashdot.org simpy.com shadows.com blinklist.com