FeedPosted Oct 8th 2009 5:20PM by John Jagerson (RSS feed)
Filed under: Other issues

Earnings season seems to be off to a promising start. So far
Alcoa (NYSE:
AA) cut enough costs to get back into profitable territory and same-store retail sales are up collectively for the first time since last year.
This sounds good and the major market indexes are up on the news reaching mid-September's resistance levels. A break here could turn into another extension of the rally. However, should investors be moving more heavily into stocks?
Continue reading How fragile are stock returns?
Posted Sep 22nd 2009 4:45PM by Sheldon Liber (RSS feed)
Filed under: Major movement, Other issues, Rants and raves, Market matters, Chasing Value, Stocks to Buy, Newcastle Investment (NCT), Best Stocks for 2009

They say you should not look a gift horse in the mouth. Sorry folks, sometimes you do. In the case of the recently catapulting
Newcastle Investment Corp. (NYSE:
NCT), which I bought at 60 cents a share, I am.
I have been following this company for a while and have both made and lost money. Although it started out as a penny stock for me it has jumped over 150% in a week and closed today at $3.61 up $0.39 (12.11%) -- for a total gain to date of 502%. So why am I complaining?
Continue reading Chasing Value: Newcastle up 500% -- why?
Posted Sep 18th 2009 4:30PM by John Jagerson (RSS feed)
Filed under: Other issues, Market matters

High yield is a nice way of saying "junk" when talking about bonds. These bonds are issued by firms who must pay a higher interest rate when raising capital than those companies that issue bonds that qualify as investment grade. Those higher interest rates are attractive to investors and lately demand for high yield bonds has led to a very nice rally in junk bond funds like the
iShares High Yield Corporate Bond Fund (
HYG).
Today, HYG is finally pausing in its uptrend as investors take some profits off the table across the bond market. Investors are concerned about the fact that the Treasury plans to flood the $112 billion worth of new debt into the market next week. That will be a record auction amount and could put temporary downward pressure on bond prices.
Continue reading High yield bond funds take a break
Posted Sep 9th 2009 4:40PM by Larry Schutts (RSS feed)
Filed under: Other issues, Columns
Can investing and collecting go hand-in-hand? Yes -- especially if you are collecting coins, stock certificates, bank notes, or other rare items of value. Larry Schutts, an expert in investment-related collectibles, will periodically review items of interest from his collection and answer your questions here.
In the summer of 1862, the rising costs of the Civil War prompted the U.S. Congress to enact a broad new tax program. The Revenue Act of 1862 created the office of the Commissioner of Internal Revenue and introduced Americans to their first progressive rate income tax. The Act also required that taxes be paid on documented business transactions and on the sale of certain proprietary retail goods. In order to prove payment, citizens and businesses bought government-issued revenue stamps and applied them to their documents and merchandise. On the documentary side, the inconvenience of dealing with stamps led many to order such paper goods as checks and stock certificates with government-approved stamp designs already printed on them. Retailers, on the other hand, quickly saw the advertising possibilities and were ultimately granted permission to obtain stamps bearing their own private labels.
Continue reading Collectible Investments: U.S. patent medicine tax stamps
Posted Sep 2nd 2009 3:40PM by Sheldon Liber (RSS feed)
Filed under: Other issues, Products and services, Management, Rants and raves, General Electric (GE), Walt Disney (DIS), Media World, Chasing Value, Stocks to Buy, Marvel Entertainment (MVL)

Some of the venom spewed at
General Electric Company (NYSE:
GE) every time I write about it, is getting kind of old. I understand the criticism of Jeffrey Immelt, the CEO who takes the blame for everything that is wrong with the company and the economy.
I too have felt that he might have done more. In particular, while
I argued Monday that most of the companies divisions were well integrated, or at least related, I am not sure that entertainment has to be a part of the mix, and the company is on the record to jettison the appliance division already.
In considering the plight of the GE shareholder, myself included, what exactly is it that investors would like Immelt to do?
Continue reading Chasing Value: Blaming GE's Immelt for what?
Posted Aug 31st 2009 6:00PM by Sheldon Liber (RSS feed)
Filed under: Other issues, Deals, Consumer experience, Rants and raves, Competitive strategy, eBay (EBAY), Amazon.com (AMZN), FedEx Corp (FDX), United Parcel'B' (UPS), Small business

The United States Postal Service has been heavily promoting it's flat rate deliveries based on the the size of the box instead of the weight in an attempt to retrieve some of the business that it has lost to
Federal Express Corp (NYSE:
FDX) and
United Parcel Service.(NYSE:
UPS) over the years.
The increasing use of the internet has reduced snail-mail traffic, hurting USPS revenue, while the internet has increased the traffic of package delivery services as sites like
Amazon.com (NASDAQ: AMZN) and
eBay (NASDAQ:
EBAY) continue to expand their businesses and new enterprises and existing traditional companies expand their web presence.
Continue reading FedEx & UPS challenged by USPS flat rates
Posted Aug 24th 2009 1:40PM by Joseph Lazzaro (RSS feed)
Filed under: Other issues, Politics
Here's a brain teaser for investors: What enabled the United States to ascend to superpower status?
Was it the inherent genetic superiority of Americans? Perhaps it was the nation's work ethic? Was it the vast and ample nature resources, or generally favorably climate? Or perhaps is was the nation's location, bordered by two, large oceans that discouraged many who had thoughts of launching an assault?
Well, while ruling out the first variable (there are a lot of smart people in the states, but no, Americans aren't genetically superior to others), the remaining variables played a role in the nation's ascendancy. But there was another pivotal factor.
Continue reading When the U.S. goes public, the economy benefits
Posted Aug 14th 2009 6:30PM by Joseph Lazzaro (RSS feed)
Filed under: Other issues, Politics

One economic point brought to the forefront in the universal health care debate is something economists have talked about for decades, but one that only recently Americans are beginning to understand fully.
Namely, efficiency in health care is a good thing, but if it's applied to private health insurance company business models -- i.e. insuring only healthy people or the healthiest citizens -- the logical consequence of it is, obviously, a larger and larger pool of excluded, less-healthy citizens and/or people who need more care and whose health care costs are higher.
Continue reading What happens when private insurance companies cover only healthy people?
Posted Aug 6th 2009 5:20PM by Joseph Lazzaro (RSS feed)
Filed under: Other issues, Politics
As
New York Times (NYSE:
NYT) Columnist and Nobel Prize-winning economist
Paul Krugman has noted on numerous occasions, the health care insurance industry in the nation has been a success. The problem is the method used to succeed -- insuring only healthy people -- has negative consequences, particularly in a democracy and in a sphere that directly impacts life itself: human health.
The original argument, really a belief, was that the uninsured would not present a problem -- fiscally, economically, or socially -- for the nation.
Continue reading Reform the health care system, the U.S. must
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